Mr. Nice Guy & the Broken Wife | Navigating Love and Intimacy After Past Abuse

35. Parenting After Abuse: Teaching Kids Healthy Relationships

18 min · I går
episode 35. Parenting After Abuse: Teaching Kids Healthy Relationships cover

Description

One of my biggest fears as a young mom was that one day my children might find themselves in an unhealthy or abusive relationship. For years, that fear shaped how I parented. Over time, I realized something important: I can't control who my children will love or the challenges they'll face. What I can do is teach them the relationship skills that healthy love requires. In this episode, I'm sharing the five principles Brent and I are intentionally teaching in our home to help our children build strong, respectful, emotionally healthy relationships throughout their lives. We talk about taking responsibility for our emotions, separating behavior from identity, teaching children that love isn't earned, validating feelings without letting them lead every decision, and helping kids use their voice with both honesty and respect. These lessons don't just strengthen future marriages, they shape every relationship our children will have. If you've ever wondered how to prepare your kids for healthy, lasting relationships without parenting from fear, this episode will give you practical principles you can begin applying today. If you'd like to learn more about the relationship tools we've used in our own marriage and family, check out the link below for details about our upcoming couples retreat. Couples Retreat Details [https://www.mynameiscourage.com/retreat/]

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36 episodes

episode 35. Parenting After Abuse: Teaching Kids Healthy Relationships artwork

35. Parenting After Abuse: Teaching Kids Healthy Relationships

One of my biggest fears as a young mom was that one day my children might find themselves in an unhealthy or abusive relationship. For years, that fear shaped how I parented. Over time, I realized something important: I can't control who my children will love or the challenges they'll face. What I can do is teach them the relationship skills that healthy love requires. In this episode, I'm sharing the five principles Brent and I are intentionally teaching in our home to help our children build strong, respectful, emotionally healthy relationships throughout their lives. We talk about taking responsibility for our emotions, separating behavior from identity, teaching children that love isn't earned, validating feelings without letting them lead every decision, and helping kids use their voice with both honesty and respect. These lessons don't just strengthen future marriages, they shape every relationship our children will have. If you've ever wondered how to prepare your kids for healthy, lasting relationships without parenting from fear, this episode will give you practical principles you can begin applying today. If you'd like to learn more about the relationship tools we've used in our own marriage and family, check out the link below for details about our upcoming couples retreat. Couples Retreat Details [https://www.mynameiscourage.com/retreat/]

Yesterday18 min
episode 34. What if Communication Isn't the Problem? artwork

34. What if Communication Isn't the Problem?

If you feel like you're having the same argument with your spouse over and over again, this episode may change the way you see your relationship. For years, I believed that if I could communicate more clearly, my marriage would finally change. But one idea from relationship therapist David Schnarch completely shifted my perspective: the two-choice dilemma. In this episode, I'm unpacking what that means, why so many couples get stuck in recurring conflict, and how our desire to avoid painful realities often keeps us trapped far longer than the reality itself. We'll talk about: * Why better communication isn't always the answer * How trying to create a "third option" keeps couples in gridlock * The difference between thoughtful healing and avoiding reality * Why accepting what you can't control creates more freedom and peace * How differentiation and self-soothing help you navigate difficult relationship decisions with courage and integrity I also share personal examples from my own marriage and healing journey to illustrate what it looks like to face reality without giving up on growth. If this conversation resonates with you, I'd love to invite you to our Couples Retreat in Bear Lake, Utah, where we help couples identify the hidden dynamics keeping them stuck and learn healthier ways to navigate conflict together. You can find more details HERE [https://www.mynameiscourage.com/retreat/]

1. juli 202615 min
episode 33. How to Become the Person Who Breaks the Cycle artwork

33. How to Become the Person Who Breaks the Cycle

Have you ever become painfully aware of a pattern you want to change only to find yourself repeating it anyway? In this episode, I'm exploring Stephen Covey's concept of the transition person: the person who changes the trajectory of their family by refusing to pass harmful patterns on to the next generation. But becoming that person requires more than awareness. It requires action. I talk about why understanding your wounds isn't the same as healing them, how self-awareness can sometimes become a sophisticated form of justification, and why real transformation happens when your desire for change becomes greater than your desire for comfort. You'll learn: * What a transition person actually is * The difference between explanation and accountability * The four human capacities Covey teaches for lasting change * Why knowledge alone rarely creates transformation * How to respond differently when you're triggered, defensive, or hurt * What it looks like to break generational patterns in everyday life If you've spent years reading the books, listening to the podcasts, or doing the inner work but still feel stuck in the same cycles, this episode will help you understand what comes next. Lasting change isn't built through awareness alone, it's built through the choices you make when old patterns feel easiest to follow. CTA: If this episode resonated with you, share it with someone who's committed to creating a healthier future for themselves and the people they love.

24. juni 202620 min
episode 32. What a Healthy Relationship Actually Looks Like artwork

32. What a Healthy Relationship Actually Looks Like

After healing from an abusive relationship and doing years of personal work, I realized something surprising: knowing what isn't healthy doesn't automatically teach you what is. In this episode, I'm breaking down the difference between abusive relationships, unhealthy relationship patterns, and truly healthy, collaborative relationships. I'll share the lessons Brent and I had to learn the hard way about communication, emotional regulation, accountability, repair, and what healthy love actually looks like in everyday life. You'll learn: • Why the absence of abuse doesn't automatically create a healthy relationship • The difference between immature relationship patterns and emotional abuse • What healthy communication sounds like in real conversations • How emotionally mature couples handle conflict and triggers • Why repair is one of the most important relationship skills you can develop • Small signs that you're making real progress in your relationship If you've ever found yourself thinking, "I know what I don't want in a relationship, but what should I be doing instead?" this episode will give you a clearer picture of what healthy, collaborative love looks like and how to start practicing it one conversation at a time. And if you want practical phrases to help you interrupt old relationship patterns, grab my free guide, Phrases That Interrupt the Pattern by clicking HERE [https://www.mynameiscourage.com/phrases-that-interrupt-the-pattern/]

17. juni 202622 min
episode 31. Why You're Still Angry at Your Past Self artwork

31. Why You're Still Angry at Your Past Self

Have you ever looked back on a past relationship, parenting decision, or mistake and thought, What was I thinking? In this episode, I'm talking about self-forgiveness, healing from shame, and why so many survivors use past mistakes as evidence against themselves. I share my own struggle with carrying shame after an abusive relationship, the powerful lesson that helped me stop judging my younger self, and the difference between guilt and shame in the healing process. We'll discuss: * Why shame becomes identity * How perfectionism blocks growth * Self-forgiveness after abuse * Parenting guilt and regret * How to stop punishing yourself for the past * Why seeing your mistakes differently is evidence of growth The fact that you can see it now isn't proof that you failed. It's proof that you've grown. Interested in attending our Couples Retreat? Find all the details HERE [https://www.mynameiscourage.com/retreat/]

10. juni 202616 min