Co-parenting Therapy
The decision to divorce is one of the hardest experiences a family can move through. Whether the decision happened slowly over years or came suddenly, it marks a moment when life changes in ways you never expected. You may be grieving the loss of the partnership you once relied on, adjusting to a new daily rhythm, and trying to stay steady for your children all at the same time. It can feel overwhelming, lonely, confusing, and exhausting.
And yet, even as the romantic relationship ends, the relationship as co-parents continues. You will still communicate about schedules, school concerns, medical decisions, holidays, and milestones. You may still sit side by side at games, performances, graduations, and weddings. Your family is changing, but you will always be connected through the children you love.
Many people who come to us share that they never imagined how hard this transition would be. They feel pulled in many directions. They want to do what is best for their children, but emotions make it difficult to communicate with their co-parent. They want to be calm and clear, but they are hurting. They want stability, but everything feels uncertain. If this sounds familiar, you are in the right place. You are not alone, and what you are feeling makes sense.
Common Challenges Parents Face
Co-parenting brings different challenges at different stages. These are some of the struggles that often bring people into therapy:
Disagreements about discipline, routines, rules, technology use, or expectations
Feeling unsure how to make decisions together without conflict
Trying to divide responsibilities in a way that feels fair and realistic
Old pain, resentment, or hurt that resurfaces when trying to talk
Feeling lost or disconnected from who you are outside of the previous relationship
Managing transitions between homes when emotions are running high
Adjusting when one or both parents begin new relationships
Feeling the weight of holidays, special occasions, or milestones in a new family structure
Supporting children of different ages or changing developmental stages
If you find yourself nodding as you read this, you are not doing anything wrong. You are carrying a tremendous amount, and it is understandable that you need support.
How We Help
At Integrative Couples Therapy, we understand how emotionally layered the co-parenting relationship can be. Our work is not about assigning blame or revisiting details of the past. It is about helping both parents make agreements, and find steadiness, clarity, and confidence as they move forward.
We help you:
Slow down enough to understand what you are feeling
Communicate without escalating into conflict
Respond with intention rather than reacting from pain
Build new patterns of interaction that support your children
Make decisions together with more ease and less tension
Create routines that help your children feel secure
Clarify expectations so everyone knows what to count on
Strengthen your ability to work as a team even though the relationship has changed
You do not have to be friends with your co-parent. You do not have to agree on everything. But you can learn to treat each other with respect and care, especially in front of your children. When co-parents communicate consistently with kindness and responsiveness children feel safer and more supported, and do better in all aspects of life.
Moving Forward
You are not expected to know how to do all of this on your own. No one is taught how to end a relationship while still raising children together. It is a major emotional, relational, and practical transition, and it is completely understandable to feel overwhelmed.
If you are separating, divorced, or have been co-parenting for years and want things to feel more stable and respectful, we are here for you. With the right support, it is possible to create a co-parenting relationship that is centered on the well-being of your children.