Designed for neurodivergent households. Flexible by design.
THE FAMILY CAMPAIGN
Stop being the only one who knows
what’s happening this week.
Designed for neurodivergent households!
A QUESTS FOR SUCCESS PRODUCT
A printable weekly meeting system that does the organizing for you, gets your kids invested in their own goals, and makes everyone's progress something the whole family can actually see.
Stop being the only one who knows what is happening this week.
The Family Campaign is a printable weekly family meeting system that shares the mental load, gives your kids a voice in their own goals, and makes progress visible for everyone — without adding anything complicated to your plate.
No rigid schedules. No shame. No starting over every Monday.
What's inside:
Weekly Meeting Pages — Calendar, weekly schedule, review prompts, family quest page, and quest log. Everything you need to run the meeting is already laid out.
15 Kid Quest Pages — Character-based weekly sheets your child picks themselves. Goals live somewhere visible all week, not just in your head.
10 Monster Battle Pages — Completed quests earn a die roll. Die rolls deal damage. When the monster falls, the family celebrates together. The variable reward keeps ADHD brains coming back week after week.
3 Pre-Built Quests — Ready to run at your first meeting. No prep required. Choose from The Device Balance Quest, The Bedtime Reset Quest, or Level Up Independence.
Q.U.E.S.T. Method Guide + First Meeting Instructions — A step-by-step breakdown of how to build your own quest for anything your family needs next, plus a guide to running your very first meeting without it feeling overwhelming.
Party Code of Honor — Where your family's values live. Revisited weekly through a quick, playful acting game that actually makes values stick.
House Rules (2 Pages) — Weekday and weekend expectations on separate sheets. Post them where everyone can see them, so nobody has to ask and you do not have to repeat yourself.
This is for you if:
You feel like you're carrying the entire mental load of your family. You've tried chore charts and sticker systems and they never last past week two. Your child needs consistency but fights anything that feels like a rule imposed on them. You're a neurodivergent parent who needs a system designed for how your brain actually works. You want more connection with your kids but every attempt turns into a negotiation. You want teamwork instead of being the one who enforces everything, alone.
How it works:
The meeting starts with food and ends with something fun — on purpose. In between, each person shares one win, one lesson, and one thing to work on. You review what's coming up. You set or update individual and family quests. You roll for monster hit points. The whole meeting, including the meal and the closing activity, runs about 30 to 60 minutes.
The framework carries you through. You show up. The pages do the rest.
A note on printing:
Not everything needs to be printed every week. Laminate your core set and reuse with dry-erase markers, or print fresh. Either works. The download includes everything — print what fits your family and leave the rest.
LET ME GUESS
You've been told your kids need more consistency.
But no one talks about how much of that consistency falls to you.
So of course you’ve tried:
This is not a you problem.
It's a design problem.
The Family Campaign is the structure you’ve been told to build, already built for you.
One short weekly meeting. A shared rhythm everyone can see. Kids who know what to expect. And a parent who is not carrying it all alone anymore.
Stop being the only one who knows what is happening this week.
The Family Campaign is a printable weekly family meeting system that shares the mental load, gives your kids a voice in their own goals, and makes progress visible for everyone — without adding anything complicated to your plate.
No rigid schedules. No shame. No starting over every Monday.
What's inside:
Weekly Meeting Pages — Calendar, weekly schedule, review prompts, family quest page, and quest log. Everything you need to run the meeting is already laid out.
15 Kid Quest Pages — Character-based weekly sheets your child picks themselves. Goals live somewhere visible all week, not just in your head.
10 Monster Battle Pages — Completed quests earn a die roll. Die rolls deal damage. When the monster falls, the family celebrates together. The variable reward keeps ADHD brains coming back week after week.
3 Pre-Built Quests — Ready to run at your first meeting. No prep required. Choose from The Device Balance Quest, The Bedtime Reset Quest, or Level Up Independence.
Q.U.E.S.T. Method Guide + First Meeting Instructions — A step-by-step breakdown of how to build your own quest for anything your family needs next, plus a guide to running your very first meeting without it feeling overwhelming.
Party Code of Honor — Where your family's values live. Revisited weekly through a quick, playful acting game that actually makes values stick.
House Rules (2 Pages) — Weekday and weekend expectations on separate sheets. Post them where everyone can see them, so nobody has to ask and you do not have to repeat yourself.
This is for you if:
You feel like you're carrying the entire mental load of your family. You've tried chore charts and sticker systems and they never last past week two. Your child needs consistency but fights anything that feels like a rule imposed on them. You're a neurodivergent parent who needs a system designed for how your brain actually works. You want more connection with your kids but every attempt turns into a negotiation. You want teamwork instead of being the one who enforces everything, alone.
How it works:
The meeting starts with food and ends with something fun — on purpose. In between, each person shares one win, one lesson, and one thing to work on. You review what's coming up. You set or update individual and family quests. You roll for monster hit points. The whole meeting, including the meal and the closing activity, runs about 30 to 60 minutes.
The framework carries you through. You show up. The pages do the rest.
A note on printing:
Not everything needs to be printed every week. Laminate your core set and reuse with dry-erase markers, or print fresh. Either works. The download includes everything — print what fits your family and leave the rest.
Instant download · Print at home · Start this week
PROGRESS NOT PERFECTION
✦
YOUR FAMILY, YOUR PACE
✦
ONE MEETING A WEEK
✦
EFFORT MADE VISIBLE
✦
MENTAL LOAD, SHARED
✦
NO MORE CHORE CHARTS
✦
BUILT FOR REAL BRAINS
✦
ONE MEETING A WEEK
✦
SHAME FREE BY DESIGN
✦
PROGRESS NOT PERFECTION ✦ YOUR FAMILY, YOUR PACE ✦ ONE MEETING A WEEK ✦ EFFORT MADE VISIBLE ✦ MENTAL LOAD, SHARED ✦ NO MORE CHORE CHARTS ✦ BUILT FOR REAL BRAINS ✦ ONE MEETING A WEEK ✦ SHAME FREE BY DESIGN ✦
WHAT’S IN THE DOWNLOAD
Everything you need to start this week.
Weekly Meeting Pages
Calendar, weekly schedule, review prompts, family quest, and quest log.
15 Kid Quest Pages
Character-based weekly sheets your child picks and hangs somewhere visible.
10 Monster Battle Pages
Roll the die, fill hit points, and defeat the monster together.
3 Pre-Built Quests + Builder Guide
Ready-to-run quests for your first meeting, plus the Q.U.E.S.T. method.
Stop being the only one who knows what is happening this week.
The Family Campaign is a printable weekly family meeting system that shares the mental load, gives your kids a voice in their own goals, and makes progress visible for everyone — without adding anything complicated to your plate.
No rigid schedules. No shame. No starting over every Monday.
What's inside:
Weekly Meeting Pages — Calendar, weekly schedule, review prompts, family quest page, and quest log. Everything you need to run the meeting is already laid out.
15 Kid Quest Pages — Character-based weekly sheets your child picks themselves. Goals live somewhere visible all week, not just in your head.
10 Monster Battle Pages — Completed quests earn a die roll. Die rolls deal damage. When the monster falls, the family celebrates together. The variable reward keeps ADHD brains coming back week after week.
3 Pre-Built Quests — Ready to run at your first meeting. No prep required. Choose from The Device Balance Quest, The Bedtime Reset Quest, or Level Up Independence.
Q.U.E.S.T. Method Guide + First Meeting Instructions — A step-by-step breakdown of how to build your own quest for anything your family needs next, plus a guide to running your very first meeting without it feeling overwhelming.
Party Code of Honor — Where your family's values live. Revisited weekly through a quick, playful acting game that actually makes values stick.
House Rules (2 Pages) — Weekday and weekend expectations on separate sheets. Post them where everyone can see them, so nobody has to ask and you do not have to repeat yourself.
This is for you if:
You feel like you're carrying the entire mental load of your family. You've tried chore charts and sticker systems and they never last past week two. Your child needs consistency but fights anything that feels like a rule imposed on them. You're a neurodivergent parent who needs a system designed for how your brain actually works. You want more connection with your kids but every attempt turns into a negotiation. You want teamwork instead of being the one who enforces everything, alone.
How it works:
The meeting starts with food and ends with something fun — on purpose. In between, each person shares one win, one lesson, and one thing to work on. You review what's coming up. You set or update individual and family quests. You roll for monster hit points. The whole meeting, including the meal and the closing activity, runs about 30 to 60 minutes.
The framework carries you through. You show up. The pages do the rest.
A note on printing:
Not everything needs to be printed every week. Laminate your core set and reuse with dry-erase markers, or print fresh. Either works. The download includes everything — print what fits your family and leave the rest.
Instant digital download · Print at home · Reuse forever
Encouraged by therapists. Built for real families.
A tool professionals immediately understood.
This started after a therapist recommended weekly family meetings to a mom who already knew the chore charts and Pinterest boards weren't cutting it. So she made something that actually worked for her family. And it turns out, it works pretty beautifully for others too. See what people are saying:
A beautifully structured tool that turns the idea of family meetings into something practical, engaging, and usable for real families.
Feedback from a licensed psychotherapist
MA, NCC, LPC, C-PD
A smart, thoughtfully designed resource that supports families while making the process feel clear, creative, and approachable.
Therapist feedback
Heather has a gift for turning overwhelming ideas into something encouraging, usable, and worth following. I would absolutely trust her to create tools for families like mine.
Early customer
How the meeting flows
One meeting can make the whole week feel lighter.
This is not meant to be one more complicated family routine. It is a simple weekly rhythm you can adapt to your real life.
Eating first helps the meeting feel more natural and gives everyone a chance to settle before you ask for attention, reflection, or planning.
Kids act out a family value while the adults guess. It is simple, silly, and surprisingly effective for helping values stick without turning them into a speech.
This helps each person reflect without spiraling into a giant family processing session. It builds awareness, language, and a growth mindset in just a few minutes.
This is where the system starts carrying some of the mental load. Everyone can see what is coming, what matters this week, and what they are working toward.
Use a die, a number cup, or any simple random number picker to decide how much damage the monster takes. When all the bubbles are filled, your family celebrates together.
Watch a movie, play a quick game, or do something simple together. Ending with fun helps everyone associate the meeting with connection, not just responsibility.
Built to flex with your family
Most family meeting systems put all the work on the parent. This one distributes it. Kids help set their own goals, which is what makes follow-through more likely.
The framework does the heavy lifting so you are not reinventing it from scratch every week. Show up, run the meeting, and let the pages guide you through.
Ready to start this week?
Stop being the only one who knows what is happening this week.
The Family Campaign is a printable weekly family meeting system that shares the mental load, gives your kids a voice in their own goals, and makes progress visible for everyone — without adding anything complicated to your plate.
No rigid schedules. No shame. No starting over every Monday.
What's inside:
Weekly Meeting Pages — Calendar, weekly schedule, review prompts, family quest page, and quest log. Everything you need to run the meeting is already laid out.
15 Kid Quest Pages — Character-based weekly sheets your child picks themselves. Goals live somewhere visible all week, not just in your head.
10 Monster Battle Pages — Completed quests earn a die roll. Die rolls deal damage. When the monster falls, the family celebrates together. The variable reward keeps ADHD brains coming back week after week.
3 Pre-Built Quests — Ready to run at your first meeting. No prep required. Choose from The Device Balance Quest, The Bedtime Reset Quest, or Level Up Independence.
Q.U.E.S.T. Method Guide + First Meeting Instructions — A step-by-step breakdown of how to build your own quest for anything your family needs next, plus a guide to running your very first meeting without it feeling overwhelming.
Party Code of Honor — Where your family's values live. Revisited weekly through a quick, playful acting game that actually makes values stick.
House Rules (2 Pages) — Weekday and weekend expectations on separate sheets. Post them where everyone can see them, so nobody has to ask and you do not have to repeat yourself.
This is for you if:
You feel like you're carrying the entire mental load of your family. You've tried chore charts and sticker systems and they never last past week two. Your child needs consistency but fights anything that feels like a rule imposed on them. You're a neurodivergent parent who needs a system designed for how your brain actually works. You want more connection with your kids but every attempt turns into a negotiation. You want teamwork instead of being the one who enforces everything, alone.
How it works:
The meeting starts with food and ends with something fun — on purpose. In between, each person shares one win, one lesson, and one thing to work on. You review what's coming up. You set or update individual and family quests. You roll for monster hit points. The whole meeting, including the meal and the closing activity, runs about 30 to 60 minutes.
The framework carries you through. You show up. The pages do the rest.
A note on printing:
Not everything needs to be printed every week. Laminate your core set and reuse with dry-erase markers, or print fresh. Either works. The download includes everything — print what fits your family and leave the rest.
WHAT YOU’RE REALLY GETTING
Done-for-you to start.
Flexible for what comes next.
3 READY-TO-RUN QUESTS
Start without starting from scratch
You do not have to choose the first goal, break it into weekly steps, or guess what comes next. The first three quests are already built for you.
BUILT AROUND REAL PAIN POINTS
Made for the things families actually struggle with
The included quests focus on device balance, bedtime rhythm, and growing independence. Not random goals. Real-life friction points.
SMALL WEEKLY STEPS
Progress that builds instead of overwhelms
Big goals get broken into manageable weekly actions, so kids are not expected to change everything at once and parents are not left improvising the path.
REUSABLE QUEST FRAMEWORK
Not just these 3 quests
Once you understand the pattern, you can build new quests for routines, emotional regulation, family habits, and whatever season your family is in next.
VISIBLE PROGRESS
Kids can actually see themselves moving forward
The monster system turns effort into something visual and motivating, so progress does not disappear into reminders, nagging, or another invisible checklist.
SHARED CELEBRATION
The whole family is working toward something together
Before the quest begins, your family agrees on a celebration for defeating the monster. That shared reward is what makes the system feel collaborative, not controlling.
FAQ
A few things you might be wondering...
The honest answers, because you do not need more vague parenting advice.
Nope. You do not need to know anything about tabletop games, quests, monsters, or anything remotely nerd-adjacent for this to work.
The playful theme is there to make the system feel lighter and more motivating. That is it. Underneath the fun wrapper, this is a practical family rhythm built to help kids follow through and help parents carry less of the mental load.
If your family loves the quest vibe, great. If not, you can still use the structure exactly as written and let the playful parts simply make things feel less annoying than another boring chart on the fridge.
They might. Honestly? That is okay.
Sometimes the answer is not to convince them it is cool. Sometimes the answer is to lean into the cheese and make a deal: try it twice. Just twice. If after the second meeting they truly cannot tolerate it, poof, the system disappears.
The first meeting will probably be a little longer because you are introducing the idea. Keep it light. You do not need to explain every detail or run the whole thing perfectly. Just establish the rhythm and maybe pick a very simple quest for the week.
Then on meeting two, actually give it a real shot. Bring fidgets. Use a visual timer. Set a reasonable time limit so nobody thinks they are trapped there forever. Whatever helps your kids stay regulated enough to try it, use it.
But yes, I would absolutely bargain for two meetings before anyone gets to declare the whole thing a failure.
Honestly? I get it.
If you are truly too overwhelmed, this might not be the moment to try to change everything. And I mean that sincerely. If what you need most right now is less pressure, not one more thing, I will fully support you honoring that. Truly. I will be over here cheering for your self-awareness.
But also, sometimes neurodivergent brains are not actually saying “this is too much.” Sometimes they are saying, “If I cannot see all 100 steps, I refuse to start step one.”
That is where perfectionism loves to dress up as wisdom.
You do not need steps 1 through 100 figured out. You need one starting point. This is a system built to make things easier, not harder. So yes, you are allowed to buy it and immediately overthink it. But my encouragement is to let this carry some of the weight.
Do not let perfectionism block momentum.
Aww. You think it's pretty. Thanks. 🥰
Short answer: no.
This is not a chore chart in disguise. Chore charts tend to be about repeating the same tasks for the same reward. This system is built around practice, momentum, visible progress, and shared buy-in.
The random monster damage matters more than it might look. You do not know exactly how much progress each completed quest will make, which adds novelty and anticipation. That little element of surprise helps keep the process engaging.
It also takes perfectionism out of the equation. Completing a quest does not mean your child has mastered a skill forever. It means they practiced a habit. Then practiced it again. And those habits build on each other over time.
Yes. Fun fact: this will work for pretty much anyone at any age.
I use the same thinking myself and I am... actually, no. I am not putting my age on this website. But I am definitely older than an older kid.
The system is flexible on purpose. For younger kids, you may keep the meeting shorter and simpler. For older kids, you can go deeper with reflection, planning, and ownership. Same structure. Different depth.
So yes, it can absolutely work with older kids. Just adjust the meeting length, tone, and level of responsibility to fit their stage and attention span.
You do not need a more complicated system. You need one that runs itself.
Start with one meeting. One quest. One monster. The rest builds from there, week by week, without you having to hold the whole thing together.
Stop being the only one who knows what is happening this week.
The Family Campaign is a printable weekly family meeting system that shares the mental load, gives your kids a voice in their own goals, and makes progress visible for everyone — without adding anything complicated to your plate.
No rigid schedules. No shame. No starting over every Monday.
What's inside:
Weekly Meeting Pages — Calendar, weekly schedule, review prompts, family quest page, and quest log. Everything you need to run the meeting is already laid out.
15 Kid Quest Pages — Character-based weekly sheets your child picks themselves. Goals live somewhere visible all week, not just in your head.
10 Monster Battle Pages — Completed quests earn a die roll. Die rolls deal damage. When the monster falls, the family celebrates together. The variable reward keeps ADHD brains coming back week after week.
3 Pre-Built Quests — Ready to run at your first meeting. No prep required. Choose from The Device Balance Quest, The Bedtime Reset Quest, or Level Up Independence.
Q.U.E.S.T. Method Guide + First Meeting Instructions — A step-by-step breakdown of how to build your own quest for anything your family needs next, plus a guide to running your very first meeting without it feeling overwhelming.
Party Code of Honor — Where your family's values live. Revisited weekly through a quick, playful acting game that actually makes values stick.
House Rules (2 Pages) — Weekday and weekend expectations on separate sheets. Post them where everyone can see them, so nobody has to ask and you do not have to repeat yourself.
This is for you if:
You feel like you're carrying the entire mental load of your family. You've tried chore charts and sticker systems and they never last past week two. Your child needs consistency but fights anything that feels like a rule imposed on them. You're a neurodivergent parent who needs a system designed for how your brain actually works. You want more connection with your kids but every attempt turns into a negotiation. You want teamwork instead of being the one who enforces everything, alone.
How it works:
The meeting starts with food and ends with something fun — on purpose. In between, each person shares one win, one lesson, and one thing to work on. You review what's coming up. You set or update individual and family quests. You roll for monster hit points. The whole meeting, including the meal and the closing activity, runs about 30 to 60 minutes.
The framework carries you through. You show up. The pages do the rest.
A note on printing:
Not everything needs to be printed every week. Laminate your core set and reuse with dry-erase markers, or print fresh. Either works. The download includes everything — print what fits your family and leave the rest.