Worry Detective
Body Clues
Brave Choices
Bossing Back Worries
Coping Skills
100

This is something that can happen when your brain thinks about a problem over and over again.

Worrying

100

When people feel anxious, their heart may do this.

Beat faster

100

Doing something even when you're nervous is called being _____.

Brave
100

If your worry says, "I can't do this," what could be a more helpful thought?

"I can try," "I've done hard things before," etc.

100

Taking slow deep breaths is an example of a ______ skill.

Coping skill or calming skill

200

Name one thing that commonly triggers worries for kids.

School, friends, tests, sports, getting in trouble, health worries, etc.

200

Name one body clue that tells you anxiety might be showing up.

Sweaty hands, butterflies, shaky legs, headache, stomachache, etc.

200

Give an example of a brave choice at school.


Any brave choice at school

200

This means checking whether your worry has evidence.

Being a worry detective

example

thought: i won't finish this project. 

evidence: have i finished projects before? yes

do i still have time to work on it? yes

have i completed parts of this project? yes


200

Name two things that help you calm down when worried.

Any 2 things that help you calm down when worried

300

A worry thought says, "I'm definitely going to fail." What thinking trap might this be?

Catastrophizing or expecting the worst.

300

True or False: Anxiety can sometimes make your stomach hurt.

True

300

What's one thing you've done even though you felt nervous?

One thing you've done even when you felt nervous

300

What's one question you can ask a worry thought?

Is it true? What's the evidence? What would I tell a friend?

300

This coping skill involves paying attention to what's happening right now.

Mindfulness

5 things see

4 things touch

3 things hear

2 things you can smell

1 thing you can taste

focusing on feet on floor 

400

What's the difference between a real problem and a "what if" worry?

A real problem is happening now; a "what if" worry is about something that might happen.

400

What is your body's strongest clue that you are starting to worry?

Your body's strongest clue

400

Why is avoiding worries usually not helpful in the long run?

It teaches the brain the worry is dangerous.

400

Finish the sentence: "Just because I think it doesn't mean ______."

It's true

400

If a friend felt worried, what advice would you give them?

any advice you would give them

500

Share a worry you've had before and tell whether it came true.

Any worry that you had :)

500

Describe what happens in your body during a big worry.

What happens in your body?

500

Describe a challenge that would help you practice bravery this week.

Any challenge (ex: talk to a new kid at camp, raise your hand, order food at restaurant)

500

Create a comeback statement for one of your worries.




example:

I can finish this project if I take it one step at a time and keep working on it.

500

Create your own Top 5 Worry-Fighting Powers list.

  • Box Breathing (4-4-4-4)
    Breathe in 4 seconds, hold 4, out 4, hold 4 
  • 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Game
    Name 5 things you see, 4 you feel, 3 you hear, 2 you smell, 1 you taste.
  • Worry Talk-Back
    Say: “That’s just my worry talking. I don’t have proof that’s going to happen.”
  • Move Your Body
    Do 20 jumping jacks, push-ups, or run outside for 2–5 minutes to “burn off the worry energy.”
  • Reset Activity
    Do something that fully absorbs attention: 3D printing, drawing, tennis, rubik cube or a quick video you choose