A simple way to support families between
court interactions.
Everything feels possible when you know someone has your back, every day —
and lasting behavior change starts there.
What Courts See Every Day
Most cases are not driven by a lack of rules or consequences.
They are driven by a breakdown in relationships — often starting years before.
People are often on their best behavior in court —
but outside of those moments, life takes over.
When relationships are strained,
behavior becomes the signal.
Where Uchi Fits
Courts do important work guiding structure, accountability, and next steps.
But most of life happens outside of court —
in the hundreds of hours each week where families are navigating school, work, and home life.
Connection doesn’t happen by accident.
And when it’s missing, behavior can quickly unravel.
Uchi supports what courts are already doing —
by making real family connection part of everyday life.
What Uchi Is / Is Not
Uchi Is:
- A simple, daily relational activity within the family — so real connection can occur
- Private and shared only among invited family members
- Simple, structured, safe, and easy to use for all ages
- Easy for courts to introduce, with no added oversight or operational burden
Uchi Is Not:
- Therapy or counseling
- Monitoring or surveillance
- Compliance tracking or reporting
- A replacement for court programs or services, or a one-time or multi-week course
- Something the court must manage, facilitate, or oversee
How It Works
Answer fun, thoughtful questions from Uchi’s database.
Read only the answers from your Uchi friends, by invite only.
Regular sharing strengthens relationships.
Stronger relationships lead to better behavior.
A few minutes a day — that’s all it takes.
Early Signs It’s Working
Before behavior changes, courts often notice:
Less defensiveness
Less emotional volatility
Easier conversations
Increased willingness to engage
More consistent participation
Small shifts in relationships —
leading to meaningful changes sooner rather than later.
How Courts Use Uchi
Courts introduce Uchi as a simple, yet powerful support activity for families.
No monitoring.
No facilitation or IT required.
No additional supervision.
Families engage with it independently
in the days and weeks between court interactions.
Court staff also use Uchi for team connection, wellness,
and with their own families —
reinforcing that everyone needs connection, every day.
Pilot Opportunity
A simple way to explore fit:
Start with a 30-day pilot.
Observe engagement and feedback — often within 1–3 weeks.
Expand Uchi based on the positive changes you’re seeing.
If this approach aligns with how you support families,
we’d love to explore how Uchi can work within your court.