You did not choose to parent with someone who thrives on conflict, but here you are. Every message feels like a test, every handover feels like a performance, and yet you are still expected to stay calm and “put the children first”. This book starts from your reality, not from wishful thinking about friendly exes and endless compromise. Designed as a practical parallel parenting book, it shows how to build structure that stands even when communication is strained. Instead of chasing emotional repair with a hostile ex, you will learn how high conflict co parenting can be managed with fixed routines, clear rules, and minimal contact. The focus is on co parenting boundaries, predictable schedules, and documentation habits that protect you and your children over time. Step by step, the chapters walk you through choosing a low-contact communication plan, drafting a divorce parenting plan that reduces negotiations, and working with schools and clinics so information is shared fairly. You will see how a low contact co parent can still support children’s relationships, and how parenting with difficult ex partners can shift from constant firefighting to quiet stability. Real-life scripts and decision trees help you handle everyday flashpoints, from last-minute demands to missed pick-ups. This book is for any separated parent who wants to practise co parenting communication without being drawn into constant rows. If you want parenting after separation to feel calmer and more deliberate, and if you care about protecting children from conflict even when the other parent will not change, these pages offer a clear, grounded way forward.
Parallel Parenting Playbook
SKU: 9789376556984
$20.99 Regular Price
$17.25Sale Price
- Samira Devane writes for parents who are doing the hardest work in the toughest conditions: raising children alongside someone they can no longer trust or understand. Over many years she has listened to stories from separated families, support groups, and community settings where conflict feels endless and official advice often sounds detached from real life. Her work translates what actually helps into simple routines and scripts that tired parents can use on an ordinary weekday evening. Samira's perspective is shaped by a respect for how different cultures have long handled family breakdown quietly, through boundaries and shared responsibilities rather than public drama. She combines that historical sense with a modern understanding of stress, children's development, and communication habits in the digital age. Her writing is practical, direct, and unromantic about former partners, yet firmly hopeful about children's ability to thrive in calmer systems. Above all, she is interested in how everyday structure and self-respect can protect a child far more reliably than perfect harmony between adults.


















