Introduce today's word: ਗੁੱਸਾ (gussa) = anger. "Has anyone felt gussa this week? You don't have to share why — just yes or no."
Simple psychology: "When we feel angry, our body goes into fight mode. Heart beats fast, face gets hot, fists clench. This is your body trying to protect you — it's not bad. But we get to choose what we do next."
Today's Sikh Tool: Waheguru Breathing
Activity: Body Map
Hand out the body outline sheet. "Draw or colour where you feel anger in your body. There's no wrong answer." Share a few if kids volunteer. Point out: "Everyone's body responds differently — and that's okay."
Simple psychology: "Sadness tells us we lost something we care about, or something isn't right. It makes us slow down. Crying isn't weakness — it's your body healing."
Today's Sikh Tool: Sangat (Community)
Activity: Sentence Completion Cards
Hand out cards with the prompt: "When I feel udaasi, I can ___". Kids write or draw their answers. Collect a few and read them out anonymously. Build a class list of coping ideas.
Simple psychology: "There are two kinds of fear: real danger (a car coming at you) and worry-fear (what if people laugh at me). Real danger fear keeps you safe. Worry-fear tries to keep you small. Learning to tell the difference is a superpower."
Today's Sikh Tool: Chardi Kala Mindset
Activity: Fear vs. Brave Sorting Game
Read out scenarios: "Speaking up in class", "Walking past a mean dog", "Trying a new food", "Standing up for a friend". For each one, kids hold up a DARR card or NIDDAR card to show how they'd feel. Discuss — no wrong answers.
Simple psychology: "Scientists found that people who practice gratitude — noticing and appreciating good things — are actually happier. It literally changes your brain. Guru Ji knew this hundreds of years ago."
Today's Sikh Tool: Shukar List
Activity: Gratitude Circle
Everyone stands in a circle. Go around: each person shares one thing they're grateful for today. No repeats allowed — it forces you to think deeper. End with: "Waheguru, shukar."
Simple psychology: "We compare ourselves to others all the time, especially online. But comparison is a trap — there will always be someone who has more. The real question is: are you grateful for what YOU have?"
Today's Sikh Tool: Santokh Practice
Activity: Compliment Chain
Sit in a circle. Each person turns to the person on their right and says something genuine they appreciate about them. Model it first: "I appreciate that you always..." This builds the opposite of jealousy — celebrating others.
Simple psychology: "There's a difference between guilt and shame. Guilt = 'I did something bad'. Shame = 'I AM bad'. Guilt can help you fix things. Shame just makes you hide. We want to learn from mistakes without shame."
Today's Sikh Tool: Self-Talk
Activity: "Everybody Has..." Normalization Game
Go around: "Stand up if you've ever... tripped in front of people / said something wrong / felt embarrassed about your lunch / felt different." Everyone sees they're not alone. End with: "See? Everybody has moments of sharam. It doesn't define you."
Simple psychology: "Humans are wired for connection — we literally need other people. Loneliness is your brain saying 'I need to connect'. It's not a weakness, it's a signal."
Today's Sikh Tool: Be the Sangat
Activity: Partner Up Challenge
Pair each kid with someone they haven't talked to much. Give them 2 minutes to find 3 things they have in common. Share findings with the group. Point: "Connection is closer than you think."
Simple psychology: "Anxiety is a cycle: a worried thought creates a scared feeling, which tenses your body, which makes you avoid things. Breaking ANY part of the cycle helps break the whole thing."
Today's Sikh Tool: 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding + Mool Mantar
Activity: Worry Jar
Hand out small slips of paper. "Write down one thing that gives you chinta. Fold it up. Drop it in the jar." Seal the jar together. "We've given our worries to the jar. Now let's give them to Waheguru." Optional: open the jar at year-end to see how many worries never came true.
Simple psychology: "Most fights happen not because of what we feel, but because of how we say it. 'You always...' makes people defensive. 'I feel...' opens a door. Learning to say what you feel without attacking is a skill."
Today's Sikh Tool: The 3-Step Formula
Activity: Role-Play Pairs
Give pairs a scenario card. One person uses the "I feel" formula, the other practices listening without interrupting. Switch. Scenarios: "Your friend shared your secret", "Your sibling broke something of yours", "You feel left out at school."
Simple psychology: "Emotional resilience doesn't mean never feeling bad. It means bouncing back. Having tools. Knowing that all emotions are visitors — they come and they go. You are the house, not the weather."
Today's Sikh Tool: Your Personal Toolkit
Activity: Pledge Wall
Each kid writes on a card: "When I struggle, I will ___". Stick them all on a wall or board together. Take a photo. Read a few aloud. End with Ardaas together: "Waheguru Ji, help us conquer our minds so we can conquer the world. Sarbat da bhala."