Prompts for Parenting
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 — 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 — 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.
Your teenager says they don't want to go to college. You don't know if it's a phase, a plan, or a call for help. Before this becomes a recurring argument that damages your relationship and solves nothing, talk it through here. A staged intake that gets underneath the surface disagreement and helps you figure out what's actually at stake — for them, and for you.
Generate age-appropriate activities for kids (or the whole family) based on what you actually have at home, the weather, energy levels, and how much mess you can tolerate. No Pinterest fantasies — real activities for real parents.
Helps parents prepare for difficult conversations with their kids — divorce, a death in the family, bullying, moving to a new city, puberty, a parent losing their job, or anything else that doesn't come with a manual. You describe the situation and your child's age, temperament, and what they already know. It builds you a phased conversation script: what to say, what not to say, how to handle the questions you're dreading, and how to follow up in the days after.
A parent's co-pilot for homework battles. When your kid is stuck on a math problem, confused by a reading assignment, or melting down over a science project — paste the problem, tell it your child's age and what they've tried, and it walks you through how to guide them to the answer without just giving it away. Socratic method meets real-world parenting patience. You learn how to teach it; they learn how to think through it.