Jared Hippler teaching a group of children through play during his Peace Corps service in the Kyrgyz Republic
Our story

From an orphanage to a movement.

How a Peace Corps post in the Kyrgyz Republic, organic farms with no shared language, and one quiet train ride home became a foundation that has reached over 20,000 kids.

Long before there was a foundation, there was a young volunteer in a place far from home, learning that the deepest connection on earth needs no common language. It only needs play.

This is the story of how that lesson, carried across four countries and a decade, became A Primally Playful Foundation.

2009 to 2011 · Kyrgyz Republic

An orphanage taught him what school never could.

Jared Hippler joined the Peace Corps and was sent to the Kyrgyz Republic as the director of health and happiness at an orphanage.

There were no perfect lesson plans and no shared first language. What worked was play. Games taught trust faster than any lecture. Movement taught regulation better than any worksheet. The children learned, and so did he. This was play-based experiential teaching, and it changed everything Jared believed about how a young person grows.

It was the first proof of an idea he would spend the next fifteen years building on. You learn more about someone in an hour of play than in a year of conversation.

Jared Hippler leading a group of children in play during his Peace Corps service abroad
Kyrgyz Republic · Peace Corps
Where the whole idea began.
Children playing together in an open field during a Primally Playful program
The same lesson, a new country
Connection without a single shared word.
Southeast Asia

On organic farms, work and play did the talking.

Between his Peace Corps years, Jared volunteered on organic farms across Southeast Asia, living and working beside people he could not speak a word to.

They bonded anyway, through the shared rhythm of work and the easy joy of play. No translation required. It confirmed what the orphanage had started to show him. Our greatest joys come from other people, not from anything we can buy or scroll.

Our greatest joys come from other people,
not a screen.

The conviction that would become a mission, formed long before there was a name for it.

2011 · The journey home

Then he came home, and the train was silent.

In 2011 Jared returned to the United States. Stepping onto public transit, he noticed something that stopped him cold.

Roughly 60% of the people around him were ignoring one another, faces down in their phones. After years of connection built on play and presence, the silence felt wrong. Something about it felt innately unhealthy, and sad.

That number is closer to 90% today. He could not stop thinking about it. The gap between what he had lived abroad and what he was watching at home became the question that would not leave him alone: how do you remind people that joy lives in each other, not in a screen?

A young boy beaming as he holds a glowing ball at dusk, fully present in the moment
The opposite of a silent train
Fully here. Fully playing.
The path

One question, fifteen years of answers.

2009 to 2011

Director of health & happiness

Peace Corps in the Kyrgyz Republic, teaching orphanage kids through play when language could not.

Southeast Asia

Bonded without words

Organic farms where work and play built friendship across every language barrier.

2011

The silent train home

Back in the US, watching most people ignore each other for their phones. The idea took root.

2018

The foundation begins

A Primally Playful Foundation is founded to change humanity's trajectory through the power of play.

2018 · The foundation

In 2018, the question finally had an answer.

A Primally Playful Foundation was created to change humanity's trajectory by strengthening community bonds through play, and by training teachers to educate youth about mental health, happiness, the effects of screen entertainment, and the social-emotional skills that equip them for lives of fulfillment, joy, and service.

Everything Jared had learned abroad now had a structure. The orphanage lesson, the farm friendships, the silent train. All of it became a method that could be taught, repeated, and carried into classrooms anywhere.

Children laughing and playing together during a Primally Playful program in Ghana
Play Pilgrimage · Ghana
The lesson, carried back into the world.
The Play Pilgrimages

The idea went back out into the world.

What started at one orphanage became a series of Play Pilgrimages, bringing play-based learning to kids and teachers far from home.

Costa Rica in 2020. Ghana in 2021. Guatemala. Mexico. Each trip trained local teachers and ran games for children who had never seen happiness taught as a skill.

Together with the work at home, the foundation has now reached over 20,000 kids since 2018.

2
Peace Corps tours that started it all
2018
the year the foundation was born
4
countries reached on the Play Pilgrimages
20,000+
kids reached since 2018
You learn more about someone in an hour of play than in a year of conversation.
Jared HipplerFounder & Chief Fun Officer
Children playing together during a Primally Playful program in Ghana
2026 · Ghana & Guatemala

The next chapter trains 150 teachers.

In 2026 the foundation returns to Ghana and Guatemala to train 150 mental health and happiness teachers. Each one will carry the program into their classroom for the rest of their career, reaching 5,000+ kids a year between them. $297 trains one teacher, for a whole classroom.