Healing doesn’t have to start with a therapy session. Sometimes, it starts with a message.
Our WhatsApp groups are soft-entry spaces — daily, digestible support that helps parents, teachers, and caregivers show up better for the children they care for. Whether you're navigating school trauma, sports pressure, adoption grief, or parenting overwhelm, these groups provide ongoing insight, reflection, and community.
Each group centers a specific need — but all are built on the belief that safer adults create safer children.
- Safeguarding Circle (teachers & parents)
Daily tools for protecting children — emotionally and physically.
The Safeguarding Circle is a WhatsApp-based support group for teachers, parents, and caregivers who want to build practical safeguarding awareness in everyday life.
We share:
- Clear, daily prompts to help you recognize risks
- Real-world reflections on child safety in Kenyan homes and schools
- Step-by-step guidance on what to do when a child discloses harm
- Emotional insight into the less visible threats — emotional neglect, shaming, coercion, adultification
It’s a gentle but serious space.
A place where adults take responsibility.
And where safeguarding becomes daily practice, not just policy.
- Mental Edge (children’s sports & mental health)
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- How high-pressure training affects emotional development
- What anxiety, burnout, or disconnection looks like in sporty children
- Why many child athletes struggle to rest, recover, or feel “enough”
- How parents can support identity beyond sport — and prevent shame-based motivation
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- Belonging Circle (adoptees & adoptive parents)
Healing identity, loss, and the lifelong journey of adoption.
The Belonging Circle is a supportive WhatsApp group for:
- Adopted adults navigating identity, grief, and childhood memory
- Adoptive parents and caregivers trying to understand trauma beyond behavior
Inside this circle, we reflect on:
- The primal wound and its lifelong emotional imprint
- Why “being chosen” is not the same as being seen
- Grief that doesn’t start with death — but with disconnection
- Journaling prompts and healing exercises for self-understanding
This is not therapy.
It’s a gentle, contained space where the complexity of adoption can be spoken — without being silenced, rescued, or fixed.