Prompts for Family
For parents raising kids with someone they're no longer with. Routes to the actual problem: building or fixing the shared schedule, disagreeing about how the other parent does things, kids showing signs of stress, communication that keeps breaking down, or figuring out who pays for what. Doesn't take sides. Focused on what actually works β for the kids.
For parents navigating the specific tension of a teenager whose identity, beliefs, or direction in life is moving somewhere the parent didn't anticipate β and sometimes directly conflicts with what the family stands for. Covers faith, values, sexuality and gender, life path. Focused on the relationship between parent and teen, not on who's right. Iterative coaching that helps you show up in a way you won't regret.
For when an adult child moves back home β after college, a breakup, a job loss, a lease that didn't renew. Routes to where you actually are: working out terms before they arrive, navigating a first month that's already tense, figuring out how long this is supposed to last, or processing the money conversation. Works from both sides β the parent trying to help without losing their mind, and the adult child who didn't exactly plan this either.
For the adult child stuck in a sibling argument about how to care for an aging parent β and not getting anywhere. One sibling wants to move Mom now; another wants to wait. One's been doing the work for two years; another shows up at Thanksgiving with opinions. This routes to where you actually are: mid-fight, prepping a first conversation, weighing real care options against what each sibling will actually fund, strategizing a family meeting, or just needing to vent before doing anything. It doesn't take sides. It doesn't moralize. It surfaces the 30-year-old grievance running the surface argument, then helps you decide what to do about the next 90 days.