Cooperative co-parenting for secure kids : the attachment theory guide to raising kids in two homes
(2024)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : New Harbinger Publications, 2024
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781648481864 MWT15723423, 1648481868 15723423
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Discover how attachment theory can help you better understand yourself and your ex, improve your co-parenting skills, and raise happy, emotionally secure kids! If you're like most parents, you want-more than anything-for your child to feel safe, loved, and confident that their needs will be met. However, this can be difficult when you're sharing custody with an ex. Instead of working together, you may feel at war with one another, and in the end, nobody wins-especially your child. So, how can you ensure that you and your ex are on the same page when it comes to co-parenting? With this unique and highly practical guide, you'll learn the science of attachment theory, and how to apply it to your co-parenting relationship. Secure attachment refers to the bond between a parent and young child, which gives that child a stable and secure basis from which to negotiate life going forward. A child with a secure base can weather the storms of trauma and life changes -such as those caused by divorce-much more easily than a child who doesn't. Co-parents who understand this principle have a significant advantage, because they can learn how to provide secure attachment for their child, even while no longer living under the same roof. You'll learn the "principles of engagement" for successful co-parenting: - Commitment: Create certainty in the midst of change by committing to show up and be present for your child, thereby creating trust and reducing anxiety. - Collaboration: Work together, with a shared vision for co-parenting, to create win-win-wins for all. - Clarity: Maintain clear, concise, calm, and timely communications, thereby minimizing misunderstandings and providing accountability. - Consistency: Build consistent structures in both homes to create reliable and predictable environments. - Community: Cultivate community and external support systems, thereby expanding the circle of love. Co-parenting is often difficult, and sometimes it can feel like a battle. But it doesn't have to be this way. Using the insight and wisdom in this guide, you'll learn how to build a solid and supportive co-parenting team. And the real winner will be your kid! Most parents want their child to feel safe, loved, and confident that their needs will be met; but this can be difficult when you're sharing custody with an ex. The Attachment Theory Guide to Co-Parenting offers proven-effective skills to help readers build a solid, secure foundation for their child-with or without their ex's cooperation. Aurisha Smolarski, LMFT, is a licensed marriage and family therapist and a certified co-parenting coach with a clinical practice in Los Angeles, CA. She specializes in working with co-parents, couples, and individuals. As a mediator, mom, and co-parent herself, she is very familiar with the challenges faced by separated or divorced parents raising a child in two households. For more than ten years, she has drawn on attachment theory and other modalities to help clients navigate the emotional whirlwinds of divorce and create a secure co-parenting family. Smolarski resides in Los Angeles, CA

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