By: Sara Walsh
In a world where even children feel the weight of worry, Gwendolyn Wildt offers something quietly radical: a simple, visual way to let go.
Her debut children’s book, Buckets: The Magic Inside Every Bucket, invites young readers into a cozy nighttime world where fears don’t have to be fought or ignored—they can be gently placed into glowing buckets and carried away, making room for peace, rest, and love.
A Story Born From Dreams
Buckets didn’t arrive all at once. It unfolded over a decade.
“Buckets came to life over a ten-year period,” Wildt explains. “I would often wake up with poetry forming in my mind and images from dreams that stayed with me. Over time, those dreams became pages, sketches, and finally, a story.”
What began as fragments—lines of verse in journals, glimpses from dreams—slowly took shape as a narrative about a child named Sam, a cozy room, and a set of magical buckets that receive fear and return love.
Her message, she says, is simple but profound: we are not powerless in the face of anxiety, fear, or worry. “We all have the power to release fear and invite love in — and that magic begins when we rest and let go.”
Why Buckets?
Of all the symbols Wildt could have used, she chose something familiar and unassuming.
“Buckets are such ordinary, everyday tools — they carry, hold, and pour,” she says. They’re also deeply symbolic. Just as we can fill a bucket with water, we can fill our emotional “buckets” with love, courage, and light—or we can empty them of fear.
That’s why the metaphor works so well for children and adults alike. “Buckets are something we all understand — they hold, they empty, and they remind us that we can too.”
From Restless Nights to Healing Ritual
For Wildt, this story is personal. As a child, she struggled with sleep—her nights were often filled with wild dreams and fears that wouldn’t let go.
Over time, as an adult, she discovered tools like breathwork, Reiki, and meditation, and began to experiment with visualization as a way to calm her nervous system. The “buckets” started as her own private ritual, a way to empty out the day and create space for rest.
“As a child, I struggled to sleep,” she shares. Later, through her healing work, she learned to let go of those fears. “Buckets began as a way to help myself sleep — and became a way to help others find peace too.”
Bringing Buckets to Life
The path from idea to published book was anything but instant.
The turning point came at a Next Level Experience in Dallas, where Wildt met a children’s author and publisher who encouraged her to finally bring Buckets into the world. With coaching, support, and a year-long editing process, the dream began to solidify into a manuscript ready for young readers.
Finding the right illustrator and publishing path, however, was one of the toughest parts. After facing several rejections, Wildt met the illustrator of Norman and the Shark in McKinney, Texas. That connection led her to illustrator Jewel Bree, who became an essential creative partner.
“Jewel made the story come alive,” Wildt says. She had pages of poetry in journals, and Jewel somehow pulled the essence out of each one. Her choice of bright yellow for the cover “felt like sunlight and hope.” As Wildt puts it, “Jewel didn’t just illustrate the book — she captured its heartbeat.”
A Tool for Homes, Classrooms, and Therapy Rooms
While Buckets: The Magic Inside Every Bucket is a cozy bedtime story on the surface, it’s also designed as a practical emotional tool. The book includes a free lesson plan for teachers and can be used in classrooms, therapy sessions, or family routines.
Wildt envisions educators and caregivers using Buckets to start conversations about feelings, resilience, and self-soothing. Families can make it part of their nighttime rituals, inviting children to “empty the day” by imagining their worries going into the buckets before they fall asleep.
“Letting go is healing,” she says. “Imagine placing your worries into a bucket each night, and waking up with lightness in your soul. If Buckets helps anyone — child or adult — sleep more peacefully, even for 30 extra minutes, it’s worth every moment that went into creating it.”
As she puts it simply: “Release is freedom — and sometimes, freedom starts with a simple bucket.”
Beyond the First Dream
Wildt’s work doesn’t end with a single story. As an author, coach, and creative leader, she is dedicated to helping others find more peace, joy, and purpose through storytelling and visualization.
Her mission with Buckets is clear: to help children and adults alike fill their “buckets” with love, light, and possibility, instead of fear and overwhelm. A Buckets workshop and teacher’s guide are already in development, and she’s actively connecting with educators, therapists, and families who want to bring the practice into their own communities.
“Buckets was the first dream — but it won’t be the last,” she says.
For readers who have ever watched a child struggle with worry at night—or felt it themselves—Buckets: The Magic Inside Every Bucket offers something gentle yet transformative: the reminder that letting go can be learned, that love has more room than fear, and that sometimes, all it takes to begin is a story, a picture, and a bucket waiting to be filled.
Discover the magic inside your own bucket — grab your copy of Buckets today on Amazon.






