Co-parenting conflicts often happen because of different parenting styles. This article provides co-parents a tool to manage different parenting styles. Get more help on co-parenting from Co-parenting Coach Teresa Harlow.

Co-parenting conflicts often happen because of different parenting styles. This article provides co-parents a tool to manage different parenting styles. Get more help on co-parenting from Co-parenting Coach Teresa Harlow.
Visit the Collaborative Co-parenting Community at HappilyDivorcedBook.com/contact to ask questions and share your struggles and triumphs.
School systems are not set up to handle divorced parents. It is up to co-parents to share information. It is particularly incumbent upon the residential parent to make this happen. Communication and sharing information about your child with the other parent is not only kind but helps your child’s other parent to be the kind of parent you want them to be.
Have I lost my mind? I’m happy to share with all of you that as of today, I am a full-time author, speaker, and all-around co-parenting advocate. My last day with JP Morgan Chase was August 30th. I’m so grateful for my Chase experience. It taught me that I am capable...
At HappilyDivorcedBook.com I’ll share with you chapters from my book, interviews I’ve given, and insights on co-parenting that I stumble upon along the way. If you are a co-parent, a child of divorce, or a family member navigating a co-parenting, step-family, or blended family relationship, I’d love to hear your story too. Was your experience good or bad? What odd circumstances did you find yourself in and how did you come through it? What do you struggle with on these fronts?
https://open.spotify.com/episode/0ZGcYRGFrN4Xh9qDWYer1J
Teresa Harlow jokes how her book, Happily Divorced, was meant to be “a journey through our happy life of divorce with a child,” but turned out to be a story of a co-parenting journey.
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