Shift With Beth

Blending Families After Divorce: Creating Safety, Connection & New Traditions

38 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Blending Families After Divorce: Creating Safety, Connection & New Traditions

Descripción

Blending families after divorce is one of the most emotionally complex experiences a family can go through. It can bring connection, love, healing, and beautiful new beginnings, but it can also bring grief, discomfort, nervous system overwhelm, and unexpected emotional challenges. What many people don’t talk about is that even when a blended family is built from love, the adjustment still impacts everyone involved. Children are navigating change. Parents are navigating guilt, fear, and responsibility. And underneath it all, multiple nervous systems are learning how to feel safe together. In a recent episode of The Shift with Beth podcast, Beth and her partner Randy shared their experience of blending their families together. Between the two of them, they’re raising seven children and learning in real time what it means to create connection, boundaries, emotional safety, and new traditions. CONNECTION CANNOT BE FORCED One of the biggest lessons they shared is that connection takes time. When families blend, there can be pressure to make everyone instantly feel close, connected, and comfortable. Parents often want reassurance that the new family dynamic is “working.” But emotional safety doesn’t happen overnight. Kids need time. Relationships need time. Nervous systems need time. Instead of forcing closeness, Beth and Randy focused on creating opportunities for connection without pressure. During trips, shared meals, and family activities, they allowed relationships between the children to develop naturally. That approach created space for authentic connection instead of performative bonding. This is such an important reminder for blended families because children often feel overwhelmed by rapid change. Even positive change can feel dysregulating to the nervous system when routines, environments, and family structures suddenly shift. WHY ONE-ON-ONE TIME MATTERS Another important part of blending families after divorce is maintaining individual relationships with your children. Many parents feel guilty wanting separate time with their own kids after remarrying or blending households. But children often need reassurance that they haven’t lost their parent in the process of gaining a new family. Beth and Randy talked about the importance of creating intentional one-on-one time with their children. Separate conversations, outings, and moments of connection help kids feel emotionally secure during major transitions. This doesn’t weaken the blended family dynamic. It strengthens it. Children who feel emotionally safe and connected individually are often more capable of building healthy connections within the larger family unit. GRIEF CAN EXIST ALONGSIDE GRATITUDE One of the most meaningful parts of the conversation was their openness around grief. Even in happy relationships, grief can still exist. Parents and children may grieve old traditions, previous family routines, holiday dynamics, or simply the familiarity of how life used to feel. That grief doesn’t mean someone regrets moving forward. It simply means change is emotional. Beth shared how difficult it initially felt to admit grief because she worried it might mean something negative about her current relationship or family. But both things can exist at once: gratitude and grief, love and sadness, hope and discomfort. This is especially important for people navigating divorce and remarriage to understand. Emotional complexity is normal. Healing doesn’t require pretending the transition is easy. EMOTIONAL SAFETY MATTERS MORE THAN PERFECTION A major theme throughout the episode was emotional safety. Beth and Randy repeatedly emphasized that they are not trying to create a “perfect” blended family. Their goal is to create a safe one. That means: * allowing emotions without trying to immediately fix them * validating feelings * giving children space to regulate * understanding that transitions between households can feel overwhelming * not taking every reaction personally Children moving between homes are constantly adjusting emotionally and physically. Their nervous systems are processing different rules, environments, expectations, and emotional energies. Because of this, transitions can feel especially difficult. Instead of expecting immediate adjustment, Beth explained the importance of allowing space for decompression and regulation. Sometimes children simply need time before reconnecting emotionally after moving between households. BOUNDARIES AND PARENTING ROLES IN BLENDED FAMILIES Boundaries are another essential part of healthy blended family dynamics. Beth and Randy shared that they avoid directly disciplining one another’s children. Instead, they communicate privately with each other about parenting concerns and decide together how to approach situations. This creates more trust and emotional safety inside the home. Blended families often struggle when roles become unclear or when children feel caught between authority figures. Open communication between partners helps reduce tension while still maintaining consistency and accountability. They also talked about everyday family challenges like chores, responsibility, and consistency. Rather than striving for perfection or control, they focus on communication, modeling respect, and teaching consideration for others. TEACHING CONSIDERATION AS A FORM OF LOVE One especially meaningful takeaway from the episode was the idea of teaching “consideration” as a form of love. Small actions matter deeply in a home: * greeting one another * asking about someone’s day * cleaning up shared spaces * acknowledging one another’s presence * showing emotional awareness These moments may seem simple, but they shape the emotional environment of a family. Children learn emotional intelligence not only through direct conversations, but through repeated daily experiences of respect, empathy, and care. Over time, these small moments help create trust, connection, and emotional safety within the household. Blending families after divorce is not about eliminating discomfort or creating perfection overnight. It’s about learning how to move through change together with compassion, communication, boundaries, patience, and nervous system awareness. Every family will navigate this differently. There is no perfect formula. But healing becomes possible when people are willing to slow down, validate emotions, stay open to growth, and create safety for one another. Blended families are built gradually. Conversation by conversation. Moment by moment. Nervous system by nervous system. And sometimes, that’s more than enough. IN THIS EPISODE, WE TALK ABOUT: * The emotional reality of blending families * Why forcing connection with kids can backfire * Creating emotional safety for children * Parenting through nervous system dysregulation * Handling holidays, grief, and changing traditions * Why boundaries are essential in blended families * Letting kids have their own emotions and experiences * The importance of consideration and communication * How unresolved grief can show up in family dynamics * Creating connection without pressure or perfection KEY TAKEAWAYS * Kids need safety more than perfection. * Blending families naturally creates discomfort and adjustment. * Connection cannot be forced. * Boundaries create stability and emotional safety. * Grief can exist alongside happiness and love. * Nervous systems need time to adapt to change. * Communication and compassion matter more than getting everything “right.” ABOUT RANDY: Randy earned his doctorate from Midwestern University, a prestigious medical and science institution in Downers Grove, IL. During his doctoral studies, he discovered a passion for outpatient physical therapy, seamlessly integrating his love for sports and fitness with advanced manual therapy techniques such as dry needling and spinal manipulation, alongside a specialization in vestibular rehabilitation. Randy has dedicated his career to sports rehabilitation, including part-time work with the Milwaukee Brewers, and has extensive experience in outpatient orthopedic care. Outside of his professional endeavors, he enjoys spending quality time with his three children. CONNECT WITH RANDY: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/randybrimhall]Website [http://rocpt.com] ABOUT BETH: Beth is a somatic coach, breathwork facilitator, and speaker who helps women and leaders move from survival mode into safety, self-trust, and authentic expression. She bridges nervous system science and spirituality in a grounded, practical way so healing happens beyond mindset. CONNECT WITH BETH: Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/p/Shift-With-Beth-100064853205810/]Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/shiftwithbeth/]Website [https://shiftwithbeth.com/] If this episode resonated, follow and subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. Share it with someone who struggles with boundaries or people-pleasing.Learn more at shiftwithbeth.com [http://shiftwithbeth.com]

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Portada del episodio Blending Families After Divorce: Creating Safety, Connection & New Traditions

Blending Families After Divorce: Creating Safety, Connection & New Traditions

Blending families after divorce is one of the most emotionally complex experiences a family can go through. It can bring connection, love, healing, and beautiful new beginnings, but it can also bring grief, discomfort, nervous system overwhelm, and unexpected emotional challenges. What many people don’t talk about is that even when a blended family is built from love, the adjustment still impacts everyone involved. Children are navigating change. Parents are navigating guilt, fear, and responsibility. And underneath it all, multiple nervous systems are learning how to feel safe together. In a recent episode of The Shift with Beth podcast, Beth and her partner Randy shared their experience of blending their families together. Between the two of them, they’re raising seven children and learning in real time what it means to create connection, boundaries, emotional safety, and new traditions. CONNECTION CANNOT BE FORCED One of the biggest lessons they shared is that connection takes time. When families blend, there can be pressure to make everyone instantly feel close, connected, and comfortable. Parents often want reassurance that the new family dynamic is “working.” But emotional safety doesn’t happen overnight. Kids need time. Relationships need time. Nervous systems need time. Instead of forcing closeness, Beth and Randy focused on creating opportunities for connection without pressure. During trips, shared meals, and family activities, they allowed relationships between the children to develop naturally. That approach created space for authentic connection instead of performative bonding. This is such an important reminder for blended families because children often feel overwhelmed by rapid change. Even positive change can feel dysregulating to the nervous system when routines, environments, and family structures suddenly shift. WHY ONE-ON-ONE TIME MATTERS Another important part of blending families after divorce is maintaining individual relationships with your children. Many parents feel guilty wanting separate time with their own kids after remarrying or blending households. But children often need reassurance that they haven’t lost their parent in the process of gaining a new family. Beth and Randy talked about the importance of creating intentional one-on-one time with their children. Separate conversations, outings, and moments of connection help kids feel emotionally secure during major transitions. This doesn’t weaken the blended family dynamic. It strengthens it. Children who feel emotionally safe and connected individually are often more capable of building healthy connections within the larger family unit. GRIEF CAN EXIST ALONGSIDE GRATITUDE One of the most meaningful parts of the conversation was their openness around grief. Even in happy relationships, grief can still exist. Parents and children may grieve old traditions, previous family routines, holiday dynamics, or simply the familiarity of how life used to feel. That grief doesn’t mean someone regrets moving forward. It simply means change is emotional. Beth shared how difficult it initially felt to admit grief because she worried it might mean something negative about her current relationship or family. But both things can exist at once: gratitude and grief, love and sadness, hope and discomfort. This is especially important for people navigating divorce and remarriage to understand. Emotional complexity is normal. Healing doesn’t require pretending the transition is easy. EMOTIONAL SAFETY MATTERS MORE THAN PERFECTION A major theme throughout the episode was emotional safety. Beth and Randy repeatedly emphasized that they are not trying to create a “perfect” blended family. Their goal is to create a safe one. That means: * allowing emotions without trying to immediately fix them * validating feelings * giving children space to regulate * understanding that transitions between households can feel overwhelming * not taking every reaction personally Children moving between homes are constantly adjusting emotionally and physically. Their nervous systems are processing different rules, environments, expectations, and emotional energies. Because of this, transitions can feel especially difficult. Instead of expecting immediate adjustment, Beth explained the importance of allowing space for decompression and regulation. Sometimes children simply need time before reconnecting emotionally after moving between households. BOUNDARIES AND PARENTING ROLES IN BLENDED FAMILIES Boundaries are another essential part of healthy blended family dynamics. Beth and Randy shared that they avoid directly disciplining one another’s children. Instead, they communicate privately with each other about parenting concerns and decide together how to approach situations. This creates more trust and emotional safety inside the home. Blended families often struggle when roles become unclear or when children feel caught between authority figures. Open communication between partners helps reduce tension while still maintaining consistency and accountability. They also talked about everyday family challenges like chores, responsibility, and consistency. Rather than striving for perfection or control, they focus on communication, modeling respect, and teaching consideration for others. TEACHING CONSIDERATION AS A FORM OF LOVE One especially meaningful takeaway from the episode was the idea of teaching “consideration” as a form of love. Small actions matter deeply in a home: * greeting one another * asking about someone’s day * cleaning up shared spaces * acknowledging one another’s presence * showing emotional awareness These moments may seem simple, but they shape the emotional environment of a family. Children learn emotional intelligence not only through direct conversations, but through repeated daily experiences of respect, empathy, and care. Over time, these small moments help create trust, connection, and emotional safety within the household. Blending families after divorce is not about eliminating discomfort or creating perfection overnight. It’s about learning how to move through change together with compassion, communication, boundaries, patience, and nervous system awareness. Every family will navigate this differently. There is no perfect formula. But healing becomes possible when people are willing to slow down, validate emotions, stay open to growth, and create safety for one another. Blended families are built gradually. Conversation by conversation. Moment by moment. Nervous system by nervous system. And sometimes, that’s more than enough. IN THIS EPISODE, WE TALK ABOUT: * The emotional reality of blending families * Why forcing connection with kids can backfire * Creating emotional safety for children * Parenting through nervous system dysregulation * Handling holidays, grief, and changing traditions * Why boundaries are essential in blended families * Letting kids have their own emotions and experiences * The importance of consideration and communication * How unresolved grief can show up in family dynamics * Creating connection without pressure or perfection KEY TAKEAWAYS * Kids need safety more than perfection. * Blending families naturally creates discomfort and adjustment. * Connection cannot be forced. * Boundaries create stability and emotional safety. * Grief can exist alongside happiness and love. * Nervous systems need time to adapt to change. * Communication and compassion matter more than getting everything “right.” ABOUT RANDY: Randy earned his doctorate from Midwestern University, a prestigious medical and science institution in Downers Grove, IL. During his doctoral studies, he discovered a passion for outpatient physical therapy, seamlessly integrating his love for sports and fitness with advanced manual therapy techniques such as dry needling and spinal manipulation, alongside a specialization in vestibular rehabilitation. Randy has dedicated his career to sports rehabilitation, including part-time work with the Milwaukee Brewers, and has extensive experience in outpatient orthopedic care. Outside of his professional endeavors, he enjoys spending quality time with his three children. CONNECT WITH RANDY: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/randybrimhall]Website [http://rocpt.com] ABOUT BETH: Beth is a somatic coach, breathwork facilitator, and speaker who helps women and leaders move from survival mode into safety, self-trust, and authentic expression. She bridges nervous system science and spirituality in a grounded, practical way so healing happens beyond mindset. CONNECT WITH BETH: Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/p/Shift-With-Beth-100064853205810/]Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/shiftwithbeth/]Website [https://shiftwithbeth.com/] If this episode resonated, follow and subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. Share it with someone who struggles with boundaries or people-pleasing.Learn more at shiftwithbeth.com [http://shiftwithbeth.com]

Ayer38 min
Portada del episodio Self-Abandonment Healing: How to Stop Losing Yourself in Relationships with Kendra Allen

Self-Abandonment Healing: How to Stop Losing Yourself in Relationships with Kendra Allen

There comes a point in healing where you realize the deepest pain was never only about the relationship itself. It was about how much of yourself you lost inside of it. In this week’s podcast episode, Beth sat down with Kendra Allen from Heal Your Heartbreak for a powerful conversation about addiction recovery, heartbreak, nervous system healing, emotionally unavailable relationships, and self-abandonment. One of the most impactful moments in the conversation came when Kendra shared this: “If you ignore your inner compass long enough, you lose your true north.” That is exactly what self-abandonment feels like. It’s slowly disconnecting from yourself in order to maintain connection with someone else. And so many people do it without even realizing it. WHAT IS SELF-ABANDONMENT? Self-abandonment happens when you consistently ignore your own needs, feelings, boundaries, truth, or intuition in order to feel accepted, loved, safe, or chosen. It can look like: * Saying yes when you want to say no * Avoiding difficult conversations * Suppressing your emotions * Over-functioning in relationships * People pleasing * Ignoring red flags * Staying in emotionally unhealthy dynamics * Shape-shifting to avoid rejection * Prioritizing everyone else’s needs over your own Over time, this disconnects you from your authentic self. And eventually, many people wake up feeling emotionally exhausted, resentful, anxious, disconnected, or unsure of who they really are. WHY WE LEARN TO ABANDON OURSELVES Most self-abandonment patterns begin long before adult relationships. They usually develop as survival strategies. For many people, being agreeable, emotionally easy, hyper-independent, helpful, or low maintenance became the safest way to maintain connection growing up. The nervous system learns: “If I become who other people need me to be, I’ll stay safe.” These patterns often continue into adult relationships without conscious awareness. That’s why emotionally unavailable relationships can feel so addictive. They activate old survival patterns that feel familiar to the nervous system. As Beth and Kendra discussed in the episode, healing is not only about finding healthier relationships. It’s about becoming aware of the ways you disconnect from yourself inside relationships. THE LINK BETWEEN HEARTBREAK AND HEALING One of the most powerful parts of the conversation was hearing Kendra share how heartbreak became the catalyst for her healing journey. After years of unhealthy relationship dynamics, she realized that even sobriety had not automatically healed her relationship patterns. She spoke openly about people pleasing, chasing emotionally unavailable partners, and learning how to stop abandoning herself for connection. This is something so many people experience after heartbreak. A breakup often forces us to confront: * The ways we ignored our intuition * The ways we tolerated emotional inconsistency * The ways we overgave * The ways we relied on external validation * The ways we disconnected from ourselves And while heartbreak is painful, it can also become an invitation back to yourself. WHY BOUNDARIES FEEL SO DIFFICULT For people who struggle with self-abandonment, boundaries can initially feel terrifying. Because boundaries often trigger fears of: * Rejection * Conflict * Disappointing people * Being misunderstood * Being abandoned * Being “too much” But boundaries are not punishment. They are protection. They are how we stay connected to ourselves while remaining connected to others. One of the most healing shifts happens when people stop asking: “Will they still like me if I’m honest?” And start asking: “Can I stay connected to myself while being honest?” That changes everything. HEALING REQUIRES AUTHENTICITY One of the biggest takeaways from this episode is that healing requires authenticity. And authenticity can initially feel uncomfortable if you’ve spent your life adapting yourself for others. As Kendra shared, healing often changes relationships. Some friendships fade. Some dynamics shift. Some people no longer resonate with the version of you that is no longer self-abandoning. That can feel lonely at first. But eventually, something beautiful happens. You begin attracting relationships built on truth instead of performance. Relationships where you no longer have to earn love by abandoning yourself. Relationships where you feel emotionally safe enough to be fully seen. REBUILDING SELF-TRUST Healing self-abandonment is ultimately about rebuilding self-trust. It’s learning: * To listen to your intuition again * To honor your feelings * To communicate honestly * To stop betraying yourself for approval * To trust your own needs * To believe you are worthy of healthy love without shape-shifting for it And while this process takes time, it creates a kind of freedom that changes every area of life. As Beth shared during the episode, one of the most empowering parts of healing is knowing: “I will be okay even if this relationship ends.” That is real self-trust. Not because you no longer value relationships, but because you no longer abandon yourself inside them. Healing self-abandonment is not about becoming perfect. It’s about becoming more honest. More connected to yourself. More aware of your patterns. And more willing to choose authenticity over survival. Because the more connected you become to yourself, the less you settle for relationships that require you to disconnect from who you truly are. And that changes everything. IN THIS EPISODE * Kendra’s sobriety journey and healing from addiction * Trauma bonding and emotionally unavailable relationships * How heartbreak became the foundation for Heal Your Heartbreak * Why no-contact is so powerful after a breakup * Nervous system healing in relationships * Self-abandonment and people pleasing * Dating after healing * Learning to trust yourself again * Relationship patterns and emotional availability * How healing changes friendships and relationships * Why authenticity creates deeper connection ABOUT KENDRA: Kendra Allen is the founder of Break Up Bestie, a platform created to help people heal, grow, and reconnect with themselves after heartbreak. After experiencing everything from toxic and codependent relationships to a devastating breakup that completely changed her life, Kendra turned her own healing journey into a space of support for others. Through honest conversations, practical tools, and compassionate guidance, she helps people move forward with self-trust, clarity, and hope after a breakup. CONNECT WITH KENDRA: Instagram: @yourbreakupbestie [https://www.instagram.com/yourbreakupbestie/]Website: BreakupBestie.com [http://breakupbestie.com]Podcast: Heal Your Heartbreak [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/heal-your-heartbreak/id1506259735] ABOUT BETH: Beth is a somatic coach, breathwork facilitator, and speaker who helps women and leaders move from survival mode into safety, self-trust, and authentic expression. She bridges nervous system science and spirituality in a grounded, practical way so healing happens beyond mindset. CONNECT WITH BETH: Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/p/Shift-With-Beth-100064853205810/]Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/shiftwithbeth/]Website [https://shiftwithbeth.com/] If this episode resonated, follow and subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. Share it with someone who struggles with boundaries or people-pleasing. Learn more at shiftwithbeth.com [http://shiftwithbeth.com]

26 de may de 20261 h 4 min