Who is StorySeekers for?

StorySeekers is for the people helping kids navigate big feelings, hard days, and growing up.

Whether you’re a therapist, teacher, counselor, parent, or caregiver, you’ll find creative, trauma-informed resources designed to make emotional learning feel approachable, supportive, and engaging.

From coping skills and SEL activities to grief support and therapy tools, StorySeekers is here to help children feel understood, supported, and more confident in themselves — one small connection at a time.

therapeutic resources for busy helpers

Creative, trauma-informed counseling and SEL resources designed to help busy helpers support kids through big feelings, challenges, growth, and healing, grounded in evidenced-based practices.

An adult and a child drawing on a piece of paper at a white table, with colorful building pieces and drawing supplies around them.

Family-Focused Social-Emotional activities you can work on together

Simple, meaningful social-emotional activities designed to help families connect, build coping skills, and support emotional growth together.

A group of children and a woman sitting on the floor and playing with wooden toy blocks around a white table in a cozy living room.
Person with short hair smiling and pointing to a floral wreath made of yellow flowers on their head, standing outdoors in a backyard with green grass and trees.

Hi, I’m Jess!

I’m the founder of StorySeekers, a business created to support parents, therapists, and teachers as they help kids tell their own stories with confidence and creativity.

I’m a clinical mental health professional with over 10 years of experience working with children and teens. My work has centered on helping young people build a sense of safety, self-awareness, emotional regulation, and resilience—especially in the context of trauma.

Before all of that, I was a shy kid navigating OCD and a trauma history who felt disconnected from my creative side. I had to be perfect. I had to do it “just right”, just like everything else in my life. If I couldn’t do it the best, I didn’t do it at all. Every time I stopped, it reinforced the idea that I couldn’t do it, which made it even harder to try again.

Over time, through therapy, the right support, and treatment that made my symptoms manageable, something shifted.

I started giving myself permission to create without needing it to be perfect. And when I did, I remember thinking, “This is my favorite version of me.” For the first time, I felt fully like myself.

That experience is at the heart of everything I create, and I hope it’s one that finds each and every one of you.

I’m so glad you’re here.