Story time with struggles

2–3 yearsEmotional WellbeingMaterials: Picture books with simple stories about overcoming challenges

During your regular reading time, choose simple books where characters face small challenges and overcome them. Point to the pictures and talk about what happened. You might say, 'The puppy fell down. Then he got back up.' Keep the language simple and concrete. After reading, you can act out the story with toys or your child can pretend to be the character. This helps them understand that facing challenges and trying again is a normal part of life, not something to fear or avoid.

Part of the Imprint developmental journey — personalized to your child.

Story time with struggles

How to Do This Activity

During your regular reading time, choose simple books where characters face small challenges and overcome them. Point to the pictures and talk about what happened. You might say, 'The puppy fell down. Then he got back up.' Keep the language simple and concrete. After reading, you can act out the story with toys or your child can pretend to be the character. This helps them understand that facing challenges and trying again is a normal part of life, not something to fear or avoid.

Why It Works

Stories provide safe ways for young children to process concepts about adversity and recovery. Research demonstrates that emotional and behavioral resilience in early childhood predicts better outcomes years later (Liew et al., 2008). Reading about characters who face and overcome challenges helps children develop mental models for resilience. At this age, when the developing prefrontal cortex is beginning to enable emotional regulation, story-based learning combined with your supportive discussion helps build the neural patterns for bouncing back from setbacks.

Tips for Parents

Choose books with clear pictures and simple plots. Your child understands concrete stories better than complex ones at this age. Connect the story to your child's experiences. Say, 'Remember when you fell and got back up, just like the puppy?' Read favorite books multiple times. Repetition helps your child absorb the message about persistence and resilience.

Materials Needed

Picture books with simple stories about overcoming challenges

Learning Methods

Interactive Play-Based LearningSymbolic and Pretend PlaySocial Learning Through Peers

Loved this activity? Let us do the planning for you.

Imprint personalizes every activity to your child — their interests, their stage, the traits they're building — so playtime is more fun and every moment counts.

Science-backed. Private by design. No spam.

Learn how Imprint works →