Printable Coping Skill Cards
Simple cards you can copy, print, or rewrite by hand. There's nothing fancy here on purpose — a coping tool you can actually find in a hurry beats a beautiful one you can't. Cut them out, tape them inside a notebook, or keep them on a shelf.
These cards go with the eight toolkit lessons. They use the same words you have been practicing all curriculum: body clues (your internal telemetry), panic brain and thinking brain, a feeling is a signal, not a command, and repair matters.
These cards teach everyday coping and self-management skills. They are not therapy or medical advice. If a child is in danger, overwhelmed, or dealing with serious distress, involve a trusted adult right away.
Kids may keep their cards private, share part of them, or use fictional examples. No child should be required to read personal coping cards aloud.
Pause Card
PAUSE
A feeling is a signal, not a command. I can feel something big and still choose what I do next.
- Stop — freeze my hands and mouth for a moment
- Breathe — one slow breath out
- Name — "Panic brain is driving right now." / "I feel ______."
- Choose — let thinking brain pick the next step
Things I can say: "I need a minute." · "Can I think first?" · "Let me try again."
Body Clues Map
WHERE DO I FEEL IT?
Body part Clue it might send Shoulders tight, raised Chest / heart fast, pounding Face warm, red Stomach fluttery, tight, weird Hands / jaw clenched Whole body want to yell, hide, or move A body clue is telemetry — information from my system, not an order.
Grounding Card
COME BACK TO RIGHT NOW
5–4–3–2–1
- 5 things I can see
- 4 things I can hear
- 3 things I can touch
- 2 things I can smell
- 1 slow breath
Or: press my feet on the floor and name three true things. (All of this works quietly — no one has to notice.)
Breathing Card
SEND A CALM SIGNAL
- Slow exhale: in for 3, out for 5–6 (the long out-breath helps most)
- Box: in 4 · hold 4 · out 4 · hold 4
- Hand trace: trace up each finger in, down each finger out
- Balloon: fill the belly slowly, empty it slowly
Breathing doesn't fix the problem — it helps thinking brain come back online. If it feels uncomfortable, stop and pick another tool.
Thought Bugs Card
CHECK THE STORY
Fact = what happened. Story = what my brain added.
Common bugs: mind reading · fortune telling · always/never · "worst ever" · labeling
Ask, kindly:
- What do I know for sure?
- What else could be true?
- What would I tell a friend?
- Problem to solve, feeling to ride out, or both?
Asking for Help Scripts
ASKING IS A SKILL
- "I need help, but I do not know how to explain it yet."
- "Can you sit with me for a minute?"
- "I need a break before I can talk kindly."
- "I am not ready to talk yet — but I want to."
Repair: "I'm sorry I yelled. I was overwhelmed. I want to try again."
Personal Coping Menu
MY MENU (keep private or share — your choice)
Category What helps me Quiet Movement Body Thinking Connection Repair Pick one before I'm overloaded. This is my own short protocol.
These cards pair with the eight toolkit lessons, starting with My System Has Signals.