Making Friends
Flexible Thinking
Friendship Situations
Friendship Weather (Feelings & Coping)
Self-Compassion & Confidence
100

What is one way to start a conversation with someone new?

100

What does “flexible thinking” mean in friendships?

100

What is a healthy way to respond if a friend cancels plans?

100

Name one “sunny” friendship moment.

100

What is one kind thing you can say to yourself after a hard social moment?

200

Name 2 questions you could ask a peer to get to know them.

200

Give one “stuck thought” and turn it into a flexible thought.

200

What could you do if you feel left out?

200

What does “stormy weather” mean in friendship terms?

200

What does it mean to be a good friend to yourself?

300

What are 3 things your body can do to show you are interested in talking?

300

Why might our first assumption about someone not always be correct?

300

What is one way to repair a misunderstanding with a friend?

300

What is one coping skill for “cloudy” (uncertain) friendship moments?

300

Name 3 strengths you bring to friendships.

400

What might make it easier to join a group conversation?

400

Name 3 possible reasons someone didn’t respond to a message.

400

What might you do if a friend is acting differently than usual?

400

What helps you calm your body when friendship feelings feel intense?

400

How can you remind yourself that one moment doesn’t define a friendship?

500

Create a step-by-step plan to meet someone new at school/work/community.

500

What could you tell yourself if a friendship feels different than expected?

500

Act out or describe a calm way to express a feeling to a friend.

500

Build a “storm survival plan” for when a friendship feels upsetting.

500

Write a short self-compassion message you could use after feeling rejected.