Turn worries into kid-friendly narration
Dentist visits, potty training, new siblings, school drop-off, thunderstorms—whatever is real for your family can become calm, chronological guidance.
Describe a real situation. We will save a gentle, child-friendly outline you can edit, export to PDF, or turn into a picture book.
These examples mirror everyday parenting moments; tap any card and we'll paste a starter situation into the form above so you can tweak it before generating.
Describe what happened or what's ahead in your own voice. The assistant turns it into gentle, readable steps—so you spend less time stressing over wording and more time comforting your child.
Dentist visits, potty training, new siblings, school drop-off, thunderstorms—whatever is real for your family can become calm, chronological guidance.
The outline usually includes phrases to read aloud, small coping moves for meltdowns, and reminders tailored to nerves or sensory sensitivities.
Export a tidy printable version for the fridge or classroom. Ready for more? You can optionally turn it into a fully illustrated picture book later.
Straightforward answers about who can use the tool, how to edit drafts, and what you can print or share.
A social story is a short, simple story that helps a child understand a routine, feeling, situation, or expected behavior.
Yes. The main output is a printable PDF version that parents and teachers can use offline.
No. Social stories are often used for autistic children, but many children can benefit from simple stories about routines and transitions.
Educator Carol Gray developed social stories as a structured way to share information with autistic learners. The approach is now widely adapted by parents, teachers, and therapists and should always be tailored to the individual child.
You describe a real situation in plain language. The tool drafts a gentle, step-by-step outline with coping ideas and optional visual cues. You can edit the text, export a printable PDF, and optionally start an illustrated picture book.
Yes. Treat the output as a first draft. Shorten sentences, swap in words your child already uses, and adjust steps until it matches home or classroom language—then export or save.
You can target preschool through early elementary reading levels (about ages 2–10). Choose goal, tone, and support needs such as anxiety, ADHD, or sensory sensitivity so the script fits your situation.
Yes. Logging in lets you generate outlines and save social stories to your library for later edits. You can still read the guidance, templates, and FAQs before signing in.
These stories are educational support tools and are not medical or therapeutic advice.