Faunaly was born from a simple conviction: to truly know a child is to also know the natural world that shaped them, and that we belong to.
Most of childhood is spent learning to fit in. Faunaly was built around a different premise: that what makes your child distinctive, their natural rhythm, the shape of their attention, the way they reach for the world, deserves to be recognized first, before it's smoothed over.
And that recognition is bigger than personality alone. A child's nature is not invented. It echoes the same patterns that shape every living thing, the strategist, the nurturer, the watcher, the explorer. To know your child as one of these is to place them, gently, inside the wider community of life.
We believe parenting is at its best when it bridges three relationships at once, the parent to the child, the child to themselves, and both of them to the natural world that holds them.
Every decision we make, from how the questions are written to flows from these three.
An archetype isn't a label. It's a mirror. Children who grow up understood as their natural type, rather than measured against an absent ideal, develop a different relationship to themselves. Faunaly gives parents the vocabulary to reflect a child back to themselves with accuracy and warmth.
A Faunaly report is written for the parent. Not the child, and not the clinician. It gives language to what you've already sensed about your child, and a frame for the friction points where their nature meets the world. The goal is to deepen recognition, not categorize.
Each of the 16 archetypes is bound to a real species — chosen because the animal's actual behavior in the wild genuinely mirrors the personality profile. The result: a child who learns their nature also learns to feel kinship with a wild creature whose survival is bound to ours.
The 16 animals weren't chosen for charisma. They were chosen because each one, the Tiger, the Octopus, the Humpback Whale, exhibits behavioral patterns in the wild that genuinely parallel the personality dimensions we measure in children.
Many of these animals are threatened. A meaningful portion of every Faunaly report directly funds conservation efforts for your child's matched species, through partnerships with vetted, on-the-ground organizations protecting habitat, reducing human-wildlife conflict, and supporting field research.
My daughter was three when I realized I'd been parenting an idea of her, not the child in front of me. Faunaly is the tool I wish I'd had, a way to see her clearly, name what I saw, and remember she belongs to something larger than our family.
Ten minutes. A report you'll return to for years. A small act of conservation, woven in.