Creativity is more than an outlet. It’s how people understand themselves, process pain, and find their way back to each other. Where creativity is free and accessible, community forms around it, and that changes what mental health actually looks like.
When you become a monthly member, you join The Society, and you make sure this mission always stays in motion. The programming stays free, the space stays open, the crisis support stays on, and people who need help finding a therapist or a resource can still get there. The work keeps going every single month.
The Society is how we make sure this work never stops. Together, we’re building a future where creativity is a legitimate part of how people care for their mental health, where community is the infrastructure, and where nobody has to navigate the hard stuff alone.
Free Scatter Joy T-Shirt: When you join, we’ll send you a code for a free item from our online store. Something to wear, something to carry, something that says you’re part of this. And every year on your anniversary, you get another one.
Exclusive Monthly Letter: Every month, Society members receive a personal letter organized around a specific theme and carried through every section. A featured creative advocate shares their perspective. A book, an album, a film recommendation that’s worth your time. A story from our founder, whether that’s how this thing started, what’s being built behind the scenes, or what impact looks like up close. And something real from someone inside this community.
A Quarterly Magazine: Four times a year, we print a physical publication and send it straight to you. Original work, submitted by our creative advocates, writers, artists, musicians, storytellers who are part of this community and have something to say. Flip through pages of real creative work, made by real people, about the things that matter within the intersection of mental health and creativity.
Same perks. We’re not interested in building a class structure inside an organization that exists to break those walls down.
Same perks. We’re not interested in building a class structure inside an organization that exists to break those walls down.
Same perks. We’re not interested in building a class structure inside an organization that exists to break those walls down.
Most of what exists for mental health was built for crisis. You have to be falling apart before anything catches you. There’s very little infrastructure for the space before that, the loneliness, the disconnection, the quiet weight of trying to hold it together without anyone knowing.
Creativity and community live in that space. They give people somewhere to go before things get bad, a way to process what’s hard, a reason to show up, and people to show up for. When that’s free and accessible, everything changes. People feel less alone, they talk about what’s real, they find help sooner, they stay connected to themselves and each other.
That is what you can help us build.