Short stories for naming feelings
Feelings stories help preschoolers connect words like happy, worried, frustrated, proud, and calm to real moments. The goal is not to fix every feeling, but to give children language they can use with a parent or teacher.
- Best for ages 3-6
- Useful for home, preschool, and SEL lessons
- Works well with printable feeling cards or worksheets
What makes a preschool feelings story useful
Keep the story concrete. Show one everyday situation, name the feeling, describe one body clue, and offer one simple action such as breathing, asking for help, taking a break, or trying again.
- One feeling per scene
- Simple words a preschooler can repeat
- A calm adult who helps without shame
Example story idea
A preschooler feels worried when it is time to join a new activity. A teacher helps the child name the feeling, take one slow breath, watch for a moment, and then try the activity with a friend.
Create a custom feelings story
Use the storybook generator to make a feelings story about your child's real moment: drop-off, sharing toys, losing a game, waiting, cleanup time, or trying something new.