Rooted Kids Collective · PreK–K Edition

Week 2:
My Body Knows

A body autonomy and somatic awareness unit for early learners. Helping children listen to their bodies, name safe vs. unsafe feelings, and trust that their body belongs to them — grounded in SEL frameworks and therapeutic best practice.

4Ages 3–6
1Lesson Plan
2Worksheets
5Activity Cards
Rooted Kids Collective · rootedkidscollective.com
Educator / Parent Lesson Plan
Week 2 · Lesson Plan
My Body Knows
A complete facilitation guide for parents and educators. No prior SEL or clinical training required.
Research Foundation

This week's focus on body autonomy is grounded in research on identity formation and institutional power. Hall (2023) found that institutions can alter a person's sense of self and override their internal knowledge — often beginning in childhood, before a person has the tools to recognize or resist it. Children who learn early that their body belongs to them, and that their "no" will be heard and respected by the adults around them, build a foundational layer of self-trust and bodily autonomy. This is protective: it is one of the earliest forms of resistance to having one's sense of self defined by someone else. (Hall, 2023; CASEL, 2020)

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Lesson Plan · Week 2
Body Autonomy, Somatic Awareness, and Safe vs. Unsafe Feelings
Age Range
PreK – Kindergarten (Ages 3–6)
Duration
3–5 sessions of 20–30 minutes each, or used flexibly across one week
Big Idea
Children begin to understand that their body belongs to them, that their body gives them information through feelings and sensations, and that they can learn to notice the difference between a safe feeling and an unsafe feeling — and what to do when something feels unsafe.
SEL Alignment
CASEL Core Competencies: Self-Awareness (identifying emotions, recognizing physical sensations and their connection to feelings) and Relationship Skills (communicating needs clearly, setting and respecting boundaries)
Learning Goals
  • Child can say "My body belongs to me" and describe what that means in their own words
  • Child can name at least one safe feeling and one unsafe feeling they notice in their body
  • Child can name the parts of their body that are private, using simple and accurate language
  • Child can practice saying "Stop," "No thank you," or "I don't like that"
  • Child can name a trusted grown-up they could tell if something ever felt unsafe
Materials
Worksheet 1 (My Body Belongs to Me), Worksheet 2 (Safe Feelings, Unsafe Feelings — A Body Map), Activity Cards, crayons or markers, a favourite stuffed animal (optional, for Sessions 1 and 4)
Session 1
~25 min
My Body Belongs to Me
Start with a simple check-in. Introduce the big idea in plain words: "Your body belongs to YOU. Nobody gets to touch your body without you saying it's okay — even people who love you." Use Worksheet 1 together — draw or trace the child's body and talk through it part by part, including naming the parts covered by a bathing suit as "private parts" that belong only to them. Reinforce: "You get to decide who hugs you, tickles you, or kisses you — and that's true even with people who love you very much."
Therapist Note — Identity & Institutional Override

Hall (2023) describes how systems can gradually teach a person to distrust their own knowledge and defer to outside authority instead. Naming the body as the child's own — explicitly, out loud, before any conflict arises — plants the opposite message early: your knowledge about yourself is valid, and it belongs to you first. This is not about fear. It's about ownership.

Session 2
~20 min
Listening to My Body
Introduce somatic awareness: "Your body talks to you! It tells you things through feelings inside — like a fluttery tummy, or tight shoulders, or warm hands." Try a gentle body scan together: starting at the head and moving down, pause at each part and ask what the child notices (or doesn't — that's okay too). Use Worksheet 2's body map to colour where different feelings show up.

Facilitation tip: If a child has trouble locating sensations, model it out loud yourself first — "When I feel excited, my tummy feels like it has butterflies. When I feel calm, my shoulders feel soft." Narrating your own body builds the vocabulary they'll borrow.

Facilitator Script

Here is an example of how to guide this activity with your child or student:

You: Our bodies are really good at talking to us. They give us little signals that tell us how we are feeling, even before words come out. Today we are going to practice noticing those signals together.

Let me show you what I mean. When I feel safe and happy, my shoulders feel soft and my tummy feels warm. When I feel worried or unsafe, my tummy feels tight and my hands might feel shaky.

Now it is your turn. Think about a time you felt really safe and happy. Maybe it was snuggled up with a blanket, or playing with someone you love.

[Pause and let the child think and respond. Give them as much time as they need.]

[Validate whatever they share. You might say: That makes so much sense, your body was telling you that you felt safe.]

Now let us try noticing where that feeling shows up. When you think about that safe feeling, what does your tummy feel like? What about your shoulders or your hands?

[Let the child respond. If they are not sure, offer a gentle guess together, such as maybe your tummy feels warm and soft.]

Let us try one more. Think about a time something felt a little bit unsafe, like too loud or too fast or just not right.

[Pause and let the child respond. Validate whatever they share, even if it feels small.]

What did your body do then? Did your tummy feel tight? Did you want to move away?

[Let the child respond. If they need help offer: Maybe your tummy got tight, or your hands wanted to cover your ears.]

You did such a great job noticing what is happening inside your body. That is such an important skill.

[End by affirming their effort not their answer. Example: I loved how you took your time and really listened to your body. That is exactly what we are practicing this week.]

Session 3
~20 min
Safe Feelings, Unsafe Feelings
Use Activity Cards 1 and 2. Read through everyday scenarios together and sort them: does this feel like a safe feeling (calm, warm, relaxed) or an unsafe feeling (tight tummy, fast heart, wanting to move away, a "no" feeling inside even if you can't explain why)? Talk through a few examples slowly — there's no rush.
Therapist Note — Interoception as Self-Trust

Hall (2023) identifies the ability to trust one's own internal knowledge as a key protective factor against having one's identity and choices overridden by others. Interoceptive awareness — noticing what's happening inside your own body — is the earliest, most concrete form of this. A child who can say "my tummy feels tight, so something feels wrong" is practicing the same internal skill they'll later use to recognize when a person, group, or system doesn't have their best interest at heart.

Session 4–5
~25 min
My Body, My Rules
Use Activity Cards 3 and 4. Practice saying — out loud, in a strong voice — "Stop," "No thank you," "I don't like that," and "I need to tell a grown-up." Use stuffed animals to role-play a few gentle scenarios (someone wants a hug, someone is tickling too long). Finish by naming 2–3 "safe grown-ups" the child could go to if something ever felt unsafe.

Note for parents: This is a great week to model "no" yourself — e.g., not forcing hugs or kisses with relatives, and saying so out loud: "You don't have to hug Grandma if you don't want to — a wave or a high-five is great too." Children learn the rule fastest when they see grown-ups honour it for them in real time.

Recommended Books
Recommended Books for This Week
Stories That Support This Week's Theme
My Body Belongs to Me
Jill Starishevsky
A gentle and age appropriate introduction to body autonomy and personal safety. Supports the week's focus on understanding that our body gives us signals and that those signals belong to us.
Talk About It Together
  • What is one rule you have about your body that you want everyone to know?
  • How did it feel in your body when you read the part where the child said no? Where did you feel it?
No Means No
Jayneen Sanders
Teaches children to say no with confidence in a warm and empowering way. Pairs directly with the body cues and safe versus unsafe feelings work in this week.
Talk About It Together
  • Can you practise saying no in a strong, calm voice right now? How did that feel?
  • What would you do if you said no and someone did not listen?
In My Heart
Jo Witek
Explores a full range of emotions and what they feel like in the body. Helps children build the emotional vocabulary that makes this week's somatic awareness activities more accessible.
Talk About It Together
  • Which feeling in the book felt most familiar to you? Where do you feel that emotion in your body?
  • Pick one feeling from the book. What colour would that feeling be if it had a colour?
Differentiation
For younger learners (3–4): Focus on Sessions 1 and 2 only. Use verbal responses and drawing instead of writing. If possible, trace the child's actual body on a large sheet of paper for Worksheet 1 — it's more concrete than a printed outline.

For children with anxiety, a trauma history, or low self-esteem: Go slowly and expect that this topic may surface big feelings — that's normal and okay. Don't push for disclosure of any kind. Keep your tone warm and matter-of-fact, not alarming. If a child shares something that raises a safety concern, follow your jurisdiction's child safety and reporting protocols.

For neurodivergent learners: Body scans can be genuinely difficult for children with interoception differences — that's not a failure, it's information. Lean on the visual body map, allow movement breaks between sessions, and never require eye contact during these conversations.
Coming Next
Week 3: My Body My Rules — body safety rules, consent, and asking before you touch.
Worksheet 1 · Print & Complete
Worksheet 1 · Week 2
My Body Belongs to Me 🤲
Name:
Date:

✏️ Let's learn about your amazing body — and who gets to make decisions about it. (Spoiler: it's YOU!)

Draw a picture of YOU in the box below
My body belongs to:

The parts of my body covered by a bathing suit are called private parts. They belong to me. Only I get to decide who sees or touches them — and grown-ups should only help with those parts for things like baths, doctor visits, or getting dressed, with me knowing what's happening.

🌟 Circle it if it's TRUE — because it is!

"I get to decide who hugs me."
Circle — it's true!
"I get to decide who tickles me."
Circle — it's true!
"I can say 'no thank you' to a kiss — even from someone I love."
Circle — it's true!
"My 'no' counts, even with grown-ups."
Circle — it's true!
A way I can show "My body, my rules!" (draw or write — a hand up, the word "stop," a strong face)
How does it feel when YOU get to decide? Circle the face that matches!
😄
Happy
💪
Strong
😊
Calm
😐
Okay
😟
Unsure
Worksheet 2 · Print & Complete
Worksheet 2 · Week 2
Safe Feelings, Unsafe Feelings 🧭
Name:
Date:

✏️ Our bodies talk to us! Let's learn what SAFE feelings feel like inside — and what UNSAFE feelings feel like — using this body map.

Colour where SAFE feelings show up GREEN, and where UNSAFE feelings show up ORANGE
SAFE feeling — colour GREEN
UNSAFE feeling — colour ORANGE

Words for how our body can feel — read them together:

Safe Feelings
calm · warm · cozy · light · relaxed · soft · safe
Unsafe Feelings
tight · jumpy · fast · heavy · sick · "want to run" · "no" feeling
When my body feels SAFE, I...

🔄 When my body feels UNSAFE, I can — circle the ones you'd try:

"Say STOP."
Circle if you'd try this!
"Tell a grown-up."
Circle if you'd try this!
"Move my body away."
Circle if you'd try this!
"Take a big breath."
Circle if you'd try this!
My safe grown-ups are (write or draw 2–3 people):
Activity Cards · Print & Cut
Activity Cards · Week 2
My Body Knows
Print, cut along the borders, and use throughout the week. Laminate for repeated use.
Activity Card 1 · Movement & Mindfulness
🧘 Body Signals Check-In
How to play — "Freeze and Feel":
  • Play music and move around together — wiggle, dance, march.
  • When the music stops, everyone freezes.
  • Take turns naming one body part and one word for how it feels right now.

Feeling words to borrow:
  • wiggly · calm · tight · warm · jumpy · heavy · light
Activity Card 2 · Sorting Game
🚦 Safe Feeling or Unsafe Feeling?
How to play: Read each scenario aloud. Give a thumbs up for a safe feeling or a thumbs down for an unsafe feeling.
  • "Someone you love gives you a hug you wanted."
  • "You're cuddled up with a blanket and your favourite book."
  • "Someone keeps tickling you after you said stop."
  • "A grown-up asks you to keep a secret from your other grown-ups."
  • "Someone touches you in a way that makes your tummy feel funny."
Activity Card 3 · Role-Play Practice
🤲 My Body, My Rules
Practice saying these out loud, in a strong voice:
  • "No thank you."
  • "Stop, please."
  • "I don't like that."
  • "I need to tell a grown-up."

Try it: Use a stuffed animal. "This bear wants to give you a hug, but you don't feel like one today. What can you say? What can your body do?" (step back, hold up a hand, say the words)

Remember: even people we love and trust have to listen when our body says no. That's the rule.
Activity Card 4 · Family Reflection
🌳 My Safe Grown-Ups
Talk it through together:
  • Who are 2–3 grown-ups you could tell ANYTHING — even something hard or scary?
  • What makes someone a "safe grown-up"?
  • Practice the sentence: "If something ever feels unsafe in my body, I can tell ___________."

Celebrate it: Draw your safe grown-ups inside the tree below.
Activity Card 5 · Vocabulary Practice
🏷️ Naming All My Parts
How to play ("Point and Name"):
  • Sit together and look at a body outline, or use Worksheet 1's body map.
  • Take turns pointing to a body part and saying its name out loud together.
  • Include the parts covered by a bathing suit too, using their real names: penis, vulva, vagina, buttocks, and breasts.

Words to practice:
  • elbow · knee · tummy · vulva · penis · buttocks · breasts · vagina

Say every name in the same calm voice, whether it is an elbow or a vulva. All body parts deserve a real name.
Therapist Note — Why Anatomical Names Matter

Research consistently shows that children who know the correct anatomical names for their body parts are more likely to disclose abuse, more likely to be understood when they do, and more likely to be believed by adults and in legal contexts.

Using words like bottom, privates, or nicknames, while well intentioned, can create confusion and make it harder for children to communicate clearly if something happens to them.

Using correct anatomical terms, penis, vulva, vagina, buttocks, breasts, in a calm matter of fact tone teaches children that their whole body is normal, nameable, and worth talking about. It removes shame and builds the communication confidence that keeps children safer.

This is not about making children grow up too fast. It is about giving them the words that protect them.

Recommended approach: Introduce anatomical names the same way you would introduce any other body part. Matter of fact, calm, and without hesitation. Children take their cues from adults. If we say the words comfortably, they will too.

Tobin, J., Specker, S., and Mullamphy, D. (2020). Early childhood educators and the prevention of child sexual abuse. Early Childhood Education Journal. Darkness to Light (2023). Stewards of Children. darknesstolightorg