Woven threads and workshop notebooks

Participant Experiences

What households say after completing a Threadkin programme.

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7+

years delivering programmes

340+

participants and households

4.8/5

average session feedback score

3

programmes with written curriculum

Reviews

From people who attended.

ST

Sirina Tanakorn

Bangkok · Starter Appointment

I came in with a box of mixed papers I had been ignoring for about two years. By the end of the hour, everything had a folder and I understood why I had put it where I had. The printed index has already been useful — I found my insurance policy in thirty seconds last week, which has never happened before.

April 2025

PM

Phirada Meechai

Lat Phrao · Conversation Workshop

My mother and I needed a way to talk about what happens with the family home when she is older. We had tried before and it always ended with one of us feeling unheard. The framework we learned in the workshop gave us something to hold onto — a shape for the conversation rather than just hoping it would go well. The second session was the harder one, but we got through it.

April 2025

RK

Ratchanon Kongkham

Chatuchak · Household Programme

Three of us in the house, all with different approaches to paperwork. The educator visited once a week and worked around us — no disruption, no pressure. The folder system looks simple because it is, but it accounts for everything. The records map at the end was the piece I had not expected to value as much as I do. It is laminated and on the inside of a cabinet door.

March 2025

NW

Nantida Wisetpan

Bangkhen · Starter Appointment

Practical and unpretentious. I half expected it to feel clinical or overly structured, but the hour felt like working alongside someone who already knew what they were doing. I left with a system that makes sense for how I actually handle things, not how an ideal person would.

April 2025

CS

Chaiyong Suthilak

Ladprao · Conversation Workshop

The role-play exercises felt a little awkward in the first session — I think that is just how it goes when the scenario is unfamiliar. By the second session it was clearer. The reference guide has been useful for conversations outside of what we practised. It turns out the framework works on more than just the topic I had in mind when I enrolled.

March 2025

AP

Atchara Pornpituk

Saphan Kwai · Household Programme

My father had kept records in his own way for decades — useful to him, but not to anyone else. After the five weeks, everything is in a system that two other family members can also navigate. The final walkthrough with my sister was the most valuable part. She was not present for any of the visits, but she understood the whole structure within twenty minutes.

April 2025

Case Studies

Three household situations, in detail.

Challenge

A household with no shared system

A three-person household in Chatuchak — two adults and an elderly parent — where each person stored documents in separate and incompatible ways. In an emergency, no one was confident they could find anything quickly, and the elderly parent's records were effectively inaccessible to other family members.

What We Did

Five-week Household Programme

The educator visited weekly over five weeks, beginning with an overview of what the household actually held and then building a folder system that worked within the physical space available. The elderly parent was involved in weeks three and four to walk through their own documents and agree on where things should sit.

Outcome

One shared archive

At the end of week five, the household had a labelled folder system covering six document categories, a written records map all three members could follow, and a final walkthrough that included the younger of the two adults as the designated second keyholder. The family reported finding a needed document within four minutes on the first occasion that mattered.

"We did not realise how much time we had been spending looking for things until we stopped having to."

Challenge

A conversation that kept being delayed

Two adult siblings in Bangkok whose mother had asked them to sit down and agree on how certain matters should be handled in the future. Both children wanted the conversation to happen. Neither felt equipped to run it in a way that would not become an argument over details rather than a discussion of principles.

What We Did

Family Conversation Workshop

Both siblings attended the two-session workshop. The framework — opening, structured listening, summarising, closing — gave them a method they could use for the actual conversation at home, separate from the workshop itself. The role-play in session two was close enough to their real situation to be useful without requiring either of them to share personal details with other participants.

Outcome

Conversation held, written notes kept

The two siblings held the actual family conversation six weeks after completing the workshop. They used the printed reference guide as a loose guide for the session. By their account, they covered more ground in two hours than they had in several years of informal discussion, and both came away with a clear sense of what had been agreed and what remained open. They annotated the reference guide and kept it.

"Having a method changed the atmosphere before we even started. The conversation was still hard in places, but it moved."

Get in Touch

Questions before booking?

Studio Hours

Mon–Fri: 9:00–17:30
Sat: 10:00–15:00

Credentials

Professional standing.

2021 Recognition

Bangkok Community Education Awards — Household Workshops

340+ participants

Households and individuals since 2018

TAEPN Member

Thailand Adult Education Practitioners Network, since 2023

Annual review

Curriculum reviewed every year; available to participants on request

Next Step

Interested in attending?

Write to us to ask about availability, or to find out which programme might be the most useful starting point for your household.

Contact Threadkin