SERVICES

Parenting Resources

Centered on your child. Focused on your family.

Children’s Law Center provides tools and resources to help parents and caregivers overcome challenges, build healthy relationships, and create lasting stability for their children. These supports are designed to guide families through difficult times and restore a safe, loving child-focused environment. 

Support for Every Step of Your Parenting Journey

Healthy relationships between children and parents are the foundation of a strong family. Whether you’re repairing a fractured bond or navigating the challenges of step-parenting, the right guidance and support can help build trust, understanding, and connection. These resources offer practical tools to strengthen your relationships and promote your children’s well-being.

Supporting Your
Relationship
with Your Child

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Fractured relationships occur when the connection between parents and children is disrupted. These challenges can arise from experiences such as trauma, separation, mental health struggles, or substance use. Understanding the sources of these disruptions is the first step and practical strategies and trusted resources can help families begin to heal, rebuild trust, and strengthen their bond.

  • The ABCD Communication Method

    The ABCD Communication Method helps you connect and communicate with your child. There are four elements that you can focus on:

    • Affect: the right tone of voice to evoke safety

    • Body Language: open, comforting gestures

    • Cultural Cues: respecting context

    • Delivery: clear, reassuring words

    The SHARE approach

    The SHARE approach will help you in promoting your child’s Safety, taking time to avoid Hurrying, fostering Attachment in brief, effective ways, restoring Regulation that may have been disrupted, and encouraging Efficacy for both parent and child.

    The 3 RS

    The 3 Rs can be used to support your child’s safety and emotional well-being.

    Reassurance that they are safe, Routines that are consistent yet flexible, and Regulation to help them manage stress and emotions.

If you live in a family with step-children or are a step-parent, you are not alone. Millions of children in the U.S. are part of step-families, and nearly 40% of new marriages involve at least one partner with children from a previous relationship.

The introduction of a new parent can create tension as children navigate loyalty dynamics and adjust to step-siblings. Step-parenting can be especially challenging in families already affected by divorce or the loss of a parent.

Fractured Relationships

Step-Parenting

Strengthening the Parenting Partnership

Navigating a separation or divorce with children is challenging, but it’s also an opportunity to develop
new ways to communicate, cope, and parent. Effective coparenting, tailored to each family’s needs, supports children’s stability, emotional growth, and safety. While styles and approaches may vary, the goal is to prioritize the children’s best interests and maintain healthy relationships with both parents.

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Cooperative coparenting is a team approach where separated or divorced parents work together to support their child’s well-being. It relies on clear communication, mutual respect, and shared decision-making, prioritizing the child’s best interests. This approach helps minimize conflict and provides children with stability and consistency during family transitions.

Transactional coparenting takes a more business-like approach, focusing on clear boundaries, structured interactions, and fulfilling parenting responsibilities. While it prioritizes efficiency over emotional connection, fostering support, cooperation, and positive family functioning can help parents manage co-parenting duties effectively and maintain stability while promoting their child’s emotional and social development.

Parallel coparenting allows parents to remain involved in their children’s lives while minimizing direct interaction with each other and operating independently in their respective homes. Each parent manages their own rules, routines, and decisions within their home, focusing on the child’s well-being. By providing stability, structure, and shielding children from conflict, this approach supports emotional and social development even in high-conflict situations.

Cooperative or Collaborative Coparenting

Transactional Coparenting

Parallel Coparenting

Families can take steps to heal and support their children by accessing guidance, building stability, and implementing practical strategies that can help reduce the impact of conflict.

    • Work with a Parenting Coordinator (PC): A PC is a neutral professional who helps high-conflict parents implement parenting plans, mediate disputes, facilitate communication, and ensure compliance with court orders, including parallel parenting arrangements. Their authority and
      role are defined by the court.

    • Create a Parallel Parenting Plan: Parallel parenting plans reduce direct interaction between high-conflict parents by separating parental duties.
      A Guardian ad Litem (GAL) may provide neutral input to the judge, helping design a plan that promotes stability, clarity, and the child’s well-being.

How Families Can Support Their Children

iIf your family is navigating a CH 50B Civil Domestic Violence cases (DVPO) and CH 50 High Conflict Custody case, Children’s Law Center’s Custody Advocacy Program (CAP) provides legal advocacy that prioritizes your child’s safety, stability, and well-being. Click here to get immediate support from the CAP team.

Additional Resources for Your Parenting Journey

For families seeking additional guidance, a variety of resources are available to help navigate parenting challenges, strengthen relationships, and access professional support.

Request Additional Support

Please email CAP@ChildLawNC.org, call 336-831-1909, or fill out the form below.