"Seasons of Change" - Giant Coloring Sheet for Kids Who Are Going Through Something

"Seasons of Change" - Giant Coloring Sheet for Kids Who Are Going Through Something

$19.95
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"Seasons of Change" - Giant Coloring Sheet for Kids Who Are Going Through Something

"Seasons of Change" - Giant Coloring Sheet for Kids Who Are Going Through Something

$19.95

Bigger than your kid
(2FT x 5FT)

Dozens of prompts built in

Something funny happens when you roll this out on the kitchen table. The questions are already there, printed right in the border. You don't have to think of what to say. You just color.

Seasons of Change is a 2-foot by 5-foot coloring sheet divided into four panels (Summer, Autumn, Winter, and Spring), each with its own tree, its own mood, and its own set of questions printed in the border. A snowman in Winter. Falling leaves in Autumn. Butterflies emerging in Spring. The whole cycle of things ending and starting again, laid out across five feet of paper.

It's for the kid in the middle of something hard. A new school. A move. A loss. The kind of change that doesn't feel like an adventure yet. Roll it out and just start coloring. The questions find their way in on their own.

Some of the questions in the border:

Which season feels most like your mood today? The winter tree looks bare, but its roots are strong. What gives you inner strength when things are hard? What does it mean to bloom like the tree in Spring? What are you blooming into right now? What's one change you're excited about that's coming soon?

No prep. No wrong answers. Just a big piece of paper and whatever comes up.

How it works

Roll it out. Find a flat space big enough: a kitchen table, a floor, a smooth patio. Unroll the sheet and hand everyone a crayon. That's the whole setup.

Color together. There's no right place to start and no wrong way to fill it in. Someone will gravitate to one corner, someone else will claim another. That's how it begins.

See what comes up. The questions are already printed in the border. You don't have to ask them. You don't have to run anything. Just color next to each other and see what surfaces.

Works best with

Crayons and colored pencils are the move. Washable markers work too, just put a placemat or a few sheets of newspaper underneath if you're worried about bleed-through. Sharpies and permanent markers will bleed through to the table, so maybe not those.

The sheet is 24lb bond; the same paper used for blueprints and architectural drawings. It's tougher than it looks, but it's still paper. Treat it like a really good piece of paper and it'll hold up fine.

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