Lasting Impact Kit
A Teacher Appreciation Kit That Truly Lasts
The most meaningful words a teacher receives are often the easiest to lose. This kit gathers handwritten gratitude from students and families and preserves it in one keepsake journal— a lasting reminder of the difference they made.
Because some words are meant to stay.
What It Is
A simple, meaningful way to honor a teacher, coach, or mentor by collecting handwritten words of gratitude in one place.
Not just a card.
A collection of voices.
How It Works
Set a return deadline using the instruction cards.
Distribute a sticker, envelope, and card to each student or family.
Collect the completed stickers.
Place them into the journal.
Present the finished keepsake.
Simple to organize. Meaningful to receive.
What’s Included
One Thoughts That Stick keepsake journal
Stationery stickers and envelopes
One marker
Instruction cards
Inscription label
Everything needed to gather and preserve meaningful words.
Why It Matters
Teachers show up quietly and consistently.
They don’t always see the full picture of the impact they’ve made.
This journal makes it visible.
A place to return to on hard days, hopeful days, and everything in between.
A Note From Us
Our hope is that this journal becomes something steady — holding the shared words that reflect a life touched and a season shaped.
Thoughtfully,
Tiffany & Cynthia
Honor the difference they made.
Give them words they can return to
At the heart of the Thoughts That Stick practice are our stationery stickers.
Designed to help handwritten words stay together in one intentional place.
Step 1 — Write & Share
Write meaningful messages by hand on the stationery stickers. Share words of encouragement, support, gratitude, or whatever is on your heart—so someone feels seen and cared for.
Step 2 — Build the Journal
Each sticker is placed directly onto a journal page, becoming part of a growing keepsake.
Step 3 — Return to the Words
The journal becomes a collection of heartfelt messages—saved together in one intentional place so nothing is lost or misplaced. These are the words you return to, repeatedly, remembering how they made you feel when they were first written.