When we talk about support in parenting, many of us imagine advice.
Strategies.
Tools.
Someone lecturing and telling us what to do differently.
So for most parents, advice is not what’s missing.
What’s missing is somewhere to land.
Real support doesn’t rush to fix.
It doesn’t correct us.
It doesn’t overwhelm us with techniques.
It doesn’t expect us to “apply” ideas perfectly.
Instead, it slows things down.
It helps us steady our nervous systems so insight becomes accessible, not just in hindsight, but in the moment.
When parenting feels hard, support needs to be human.
It looks like:
having space to pause without judgement – being being met with curiosity rather than correction – being supported between moments, not just after them, and feeling held while things untangle internally.
Support is not something we receive once and then carry alone.
It is something we are accompanied through.
When we feel internally steadier, behaviour often shifts without force.
Not because we are trying harder,
but because we are no longer parenting from urgency or overload.
Children respond to the emotional environment around them.
And that environment changes when we feel supported enough to slow down, reflect, and choose.
Whether we are parenting under one roof or across two homes, support needs to meet us where we actually are.
It must be flexible.
Responsive.
Grounded in real life.
Because parenting doesn’t happen in neat sessions.
It happens in mornings, transitions, handovers, tired evenings, and emotionally charged moments.
Support needs to live there too.
Because when we are supported in this way, something important shifts.
We stop carrying everything alone.
We stop blaming ourselves.
We begin to feel more present and less reactive.
Not perfect.
But steadier.
And from that place, parenting begins to feel different.
