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Social Skills

  • Sorry Feels Hard Sorry Feels Hard

    Sorry Feels Hard

    $39.99

    A child and a parent navigate three real friendship moments — a broken crayon, a knocked-over tower, a hurtful accident — where saying sorry feels almost impossible, but choosing courage over comfort changes everything. Because a real apology isn't just words: it's looking someone in the eye, meaning it, and doing something to make it right again.

    2 CHARS: KID & PARENT SOCIAL SKILLS
  • I Can't — We Can I Can't — We Can

    I Can't — We Can

    $39.99

    A child and a parent work through three moments that are simply too big for one small person alone — a box that won't budge, a task that makes no sense, and an obstacle course where crossing the finish line first means leaving a friend behind — and discover every time that asking for help isn't giving up. Because knowing when you need others, finding the words to ask, and choosing your team over your own glory are not signs of weakness — they are some of the strongest things a person can do.

    2 CHARS: KID & PARENT SOCIAL SKILLS
  • How Friends Begin How Friends Begin

    How Friends Begin

    $39.99

    A child and a parent discover together that friendship never needs a perfect introduction — just three small brave moments: walking up to a child alone in a sandbox, offering a hand to someone stuck on a puzzle, and saying hello to a nervous newcomer at the playground gate. Because noticing someone who is alone, offering help, and taking one step toward a stranger are not small things — they are exactly how every friendship in the world has ever begun.

    2 CHARS: KID & PARENT SOCIAL SKILLS
  • Better Together Better Together

    Better Together

    $39.99

    A child and a parent navigate three real moments where "mine" feels like the only answer — a favorite fire truck, a playground ball, and a brand-new box of blocks — and discover each time that choosing "ours" opens up something bigger, louder, and more joyful than playing alone ever could. Because sharing isn't about giving something away — it's about building something you never could have built by yourself.

    2 CHARS: KID & PARENT SOCIAL SKILLS