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My Book of Stuff

- CREATIVE SUPPORT JOURNAL + STICKERS -

 

My Book of Stuff

$7.50

A bundle of support and creativity
1 kraft journal + 2 sheets of colorful stickers


32 pages of limitless ways to express with lined, dotted, grid, and blank pages. Use the stickers as prompts, collage with organic shapes, or go wild! At the end, fill in a reflection page to highlight all you created.

A note to grown-ups: Children and teens may express their grief and feelings differently depending on their development, personality, and creative style. It may sometimes look like re-playing an event like a funeral or drawing details they remember. It can be very healthy and normal - the goal is to help them feel safe in expressing whatever they need at a pace that feels meaningful to them. Processing can also look like writing or doodling about something entirely not loss-related too. Grief is part of the life journey, not their everything. Integrating loss into everyday is knowing some parts stay the same while others might change.

 

📚 Bulk & Group Orders

Support your team, classroom, or community with creative reflection tools. Our journals are designed to nurture conversation, creativity, and connection. Perfect for schools, hospices, grief centers, and community programs.

Pricing Options

 
Quantity Range Price per Journal Ways to Use
1-9 $7.50 Our standard retail price for individual gifts or for families
10-49 $5.50 Save 25% for small groups, gatherings, and classrooms
50-499 $4.25 Ideal for workshops, conferences, and schools
500+ $3.25 Partner rate (for nonprofits & bulk programs)
 

Email Rebecca or fill out our bulk order request form to receive an invoice and shipping estimate.

Note: Bulk discounts help us expand access to grief-informed, art-based resources for families and educators.

 

Bulk Order Request Form

 
 
 


Journals in Action (Circle of Care News Report)

Jessica Kimpel, MLIS
Children’s Librarian

The text and illustrations both are great. I appreciated how the actual death was handled within the text. The subject matter is difficult but deftly handled and appropriate. I think it will be a perfect match for many families going through a similar process. I will definitely be looking to add it to our branch collection.

Training with the Journals at Professional Conferences

Jessica Kimpel, MLIS
Children’s Librarian

The text and illustrations both are great. I appreciated how the actual death was handled within the text. The subject matter is difficult but deftly handled and appropriate. I think it will be a perfect match for many families going through a similar process. I will definitely be looking to add it to our branch collection.

In the Hands of a Child,
Imaginative Expression Soars

Jessica Kimpel, MLIS
Children’s Librarian

The text and illustrations both are great. I appreciated how the actual death was handled within the text. The subject matter is difficult but deftly handled and appropriate. I think it will be a perfect match for many families going through a similar process. I will definitely be looking to add it to our branch collection.



The Motivation

When Rebecca’s father-in-law passed away in 2013, he was survived by a three-year-old son, her husband’s half brother.  She was on a mission to find resources but to her surprise, not much children’s literature related to the hospice care experience.  So, she wrote her own book.

Rebecca remembered when her college roommate passed away under hospice care and used that as the inspiration to write Moving In Forever


 The Inspiration

The characters in the book are based on real people in Rebecca’s life.  Carrie was her funny, quirky, fierce college roommate who died of brain cancer under hospice care at her sister’s home in 2010.

Rebecca was fortunate to have spent Carrie’s final ten days with her and even more fortunate to witness the joy and hope that her sister’s family embraced in caring for Carrie. Rebecca saw how well they loved Carrie and how every detail was taken into consideration.

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Carrie’s two nephews were a consistent beam of light and innocence. She felt the enormous love and affection the boys had for their aunt even at such a young age. The boys had questions and wondered many things and each issue was always received and addressed with sensitivity and simplicity. Rebecca heard how truthful and open the parents spoke to the boys.

Rebecca was in awe of this family and how they held each other up. She used their actions and attitude as inspiration for how she spoke (and still speaks) with her half-brother about losing his father.

Now, she is using their story as inspiration to start a company and create a much-needed resource for other families going through a similarly difficult time. As she tours with her book, Rebecca feels honored to facilitate workshops to help families cope with sensitive life topics and circumstances.