Listening to my Body: Where I Feel the Emotions

Basic
Age: 5
5 sessions of approx. 20 min
Children listen to a story, share experiences, and map emotions on body outlines to explore how feelings show up in the body. The group, which should not be too large, is working on one emotion at a time, always presenting the same work pattern.
Self-regulation Growth mindset
Cognitive task Conversation Parents
  • Sheets of paper
  • Colored pencils
  • Markers
  • Crayons
  • Pencils
  • Stories about emotions to read aloud
  • Large poster board (Bristol board or similar)

Preparation

Select a short story or several stories that describe different emotions.

Implementation

Start by reading a short story that describes different emotions. Use simple questions to help children understand what happened in the story and how the characters felt. Encourage the children to think of times when they felt the same way.

Main Activity (can be split in two activities)

Invite the children to share their own experiences of feeling these emotions. Focus their attention on how emotions don’t just stay in our heads but often send signals to our bodies, like a fast heartbeat, shaky hands, or a warm face.

Give each child a blank body outline. Ask them to color or mark the part of the body where they remember feeling a specific emotion. Let them choose colors or shapes that feel right to them.

Reflection

End with a short group conversation about how paying attention to these body signals can help us recognize and understand our feelings better. Remind children that learning to notice these signals is the first step toward managing emotions in healthy ways.

Variations and Additional Ideas

Prepare a large poster with several empty balloon shapes already drawn. The teacher explains that each balloon represents ideas that can help us deal with difficult emotions. Each child shares a personal strategy that works for them, and the teacher writes these ideas inside the balloon image.

Children then choose the strategy they find most helpful, draw it on a small sheet of paper, and stick it to the corresponding balloon. The group gathers again to compare their ideas and talk about different ways to handle emotions like sadness, anger, or fear.

The teacher collects all the drawings and creates a large "Balloon Poster". Each balloon on the poster represents an action or solution, such as places children like to go, games they enjoy, or friends they feel good playing with. This poster stays on display as a helpful reminder for the children whenever they need support with strong feelings.

Worksheet "Body Outline"

Color the part of your body where you felt the emotion

Photos of the Activity

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