
THE SOCIAL SKILLS SCHOOL DOESN'T TEACH
The social rules your child needs before someone teaches them the hard way
Every chapter is a scene your child will actually face. A classmate who won't let them play. A false accusation they don't know how to answer. Being left out, mocked, or pushed around and not knowing what to say back.
No lectures. No memorization. Just real social situations explained the way a mentor would walk your child through it, panel by panel.
Built for kids who learn by seeing it, not being lectured about it
Leadership Enlightenment hands kids the story first. Instead of paragraphs of advice, they get the comic scene, the conflict, and how it gets resolved, shown step by step.
Each chapter breaks down one real situation: how to set a boundary without losing a friend, what to say when they're falsely accused, how to stop shrinking themselves just to keep everyone comfortable. They see it play out in the story before they ever have to handle it themselves.
With 6+ chapters and 100+ pages, every page gives them something to use at school tomorrow.
QUICK ANSWERS ABOUT WHAT'S INSIDE
What's inside Leadership Enlightenment?
What's inside Leadership Enlightenment?
6+ full-color comic chapters covering Communication, Confidence and Courage, Taking Action, Self-Management, and Handling Difficult Situations. 100+ pages of story-driven scenes kids actually relate to, told through comics more addictive than a video game.
Who is this for?
Who is this for?
Kids ages 5 to 12 (a great fit from ages 3 to 14), especially quiet, shy, naive, or people-pleasing kids, and parents who want to get ahead of bullying and boundary issues before middle school.
Is this a textbook or a comic book?
Is this a textbook or a comic book?
A comic book. No dense chapters, no lecturing. Every social skill is taught through an illustrated story first, explanation second.
Does it cover things like bullying and false accusations?
Does it cover things like bullying and false accusations?
Yes. Being isolated at school, bullied or mocked by classmates, falsely accused, and pressured by peers, all shown through relatable comic scenes and broken down the way you'd want a mentor to walk your child through it.