Seek Co-Parenting Help with One Bridge to Peace

by | Mar 10, 2014 | Children in Divorce, Parents, Uncategorized | 1 comment

One Bridge to Peace provides specific, concrete tools that will allow one willing, caring parent to relate peacefully with even the most bitter and contentious co-parent. This workshop specifically debunks the notion that it takes two willing adults to create an environment of peace and safety for children whose family is in conflict. While the methodology and practical tips seem simple, they are not easy and in fact are highly counter-emotional. One Bridge to Peace simply requires one willing adult–one caring adult who is willing to put aside anger, resentment and pride–to create a peaceful and safe life for the children in their lives. One Bridge to Peace requires one parent to accept and adhere to a philosophy, a set of principles, and specific behaviors that will eventually disarm and re-engage even the most bitter and contentious parent. We have found that the One Bridge to Peace model can be used to reduce conflict in every situation–marriage, work, community, neighborhoods, as well as divorced or divorcing families. Conflict tears away at the very fabric of our lives. Attend a One Bridge to Peace workshop and start building one bridge to peace in your own life and the lives of the children you care about deeply.

More Collaborative Law Posts

Free Divorce Consultation

Free Divorce Consultation

(Click the blog title to access article links)Schedule your free 30-minute divorce consultation Click hereDivorce Professionals throughout the United States are providing free 30-minute divorce consultations. During your free consultation, you will meet privately with...

The Good News About Being Part of the Problem

The Good News About Being Part of the Problem

I hear some version of this almost every week:  “I’ve tried everything. Nothing works. I don’t think it even matters.” The person sitting across from me is genuinely exhausted. Not “we had a rough month” exhausted. I mean battle-worn, hope-thinning,...

(RE)LEARNING THE SEVEN POWERS OF PLAY – PART 2

(RE)LEARNING THE SEVEN POWERS OF PLAY – PART 2

In Part 1, we talked about how kids just seem to know how to play, and consequently, they develop important skills through play.  As previously mentioned, the Minnesota Children’s Museum in St. Paul has an exhibit, “Seven Powers of Play” where kids create, tinker, and...