Co-Parenting With Grace

Jodi Grace

I’m Jodi Grace—a stepmom, wife, and co-parent showing up for the hard conversations. On this podcast, we explore what it really takes to raise kids across households—with empathy, resilience, and a whole lot of grace. 

  1. MAR 17

    Love After Loss: Parenting, Grief, and Finding Joy Again

    Today’s conversation is one that so many families live, but few know how to put into words. I’m sitting down with my friend Ryann Cummings Kamphaus with Grace In Motion: Health & Wellness Coaching -- to talk about grief, parenting, and what it looks like to find joy again after loss. Both Ryann and her husband now, Zach, lost their spouses while raising children. What followed wasn’t just a love story — it was the blending of two families, each carrying their own grief, their own memories, and their own healing. In this episode, we talk about what it means to honor the parents who came before while building something new, how grief shows up in children in different ways, and how love and joy can exist alongside loss. This conversation is tender, honest, and deeply human — and I’m so grateful Ryann was willing to share her heart and her story. If you’re walking through grief, blending a family, or trying to hold both pain and hope at the same time… this episode is for you. Thanks for tuning in to this Co-Parenting with Grace Production * New episodes every Tuesday & shorts every Thursday * Subscribe, follow, and leave a review to help us grow! Explore more: 📌 Website 📸 Instagram 💌 Join the email list for updates, freebies, and behind-the-scenes love! Have a story to share or a topic you want covered? Email us: jodi@coparentingwithgracepodcast.com ⚖️ This podcast is for support and community. It does not replace legal, medical, or therapeutic advice.

    1h 14m
  2. MAR 3

    Healing Your Inner Child: Trauma, Triggers & Reparenting Yourself | With Greg Ferguson | Part Two

    In Part Two of this powerful conversation with couples therapist Greg Ferguson of Deer Creek Counseling, we go deeper. This episode is about healing. We explore how childhood wounds, attachment injuries, and unresolved trauma show up in our marriages, our parenting, and our blended families — often without us realizing it. If you’ve ever thought: “Why does this trigger me so much?” “Why do I react bigger than the moment requires?” “Why do I feel like a younger version of myself during conflict?” This conversation is for you. Greg walks us through: • What “reparenting yourself” actually means • How trauma responses (fight, flight, freeze, fawn) show up in relationships • Why blended families can activate deeper emotional triggers • How to differentiate between a current conflict and an old wound • What healing realistically looks like • How to break generational cycles so you can parent differently This episode isn’t just about awareness — it’s about responsibility, growth, and creating emotional safety inside your marriage and your home. Part One of this conversation focused on marriage communication, connection, and repair. If you haven’t listened to that yet, start there. Greg is currently accepting new clients. 🌐 Deer Creek Counseling 📧 DeerCreekCounsel@gmail.com 📞 913-703-7524 Healing is layered. It’s slow. It’s brave. And it changes everything. Thanks for tuning in to this Co-Parenting with Grace Production * New episodes every Tuesday & shorts every Thursday * Subscribe, follow, and leave a review to help us grow! Explore more: 📌 Website 📸 Instagram 💌 Join the email list for updates, freebies, and behind-the-scenes love! Have a story to share or a topic you want covered? Email us: jodi@coparentingwithgracepodcast.com ⚖️ This podcast is for support and community. It does not replace legal, medical, or therapeutic advice.

    1h 17m
  3. FEB 24

    Marriage Communication, Repair & Emotional Safety | Couples Therapy with Greg Ferguson

    In this powerful and honest conversation, Jodi sits down with therapist Greg Ferguson, founder of Deer Creek Counseling, to talk about marriage — connection, repair, communication, and what it really takes to build emotional safety. Greg has been part of Jodi’s personal counseling journey for over five years and has also worked with Jodi and her husband in couples therapy. In this episode, he shares practical tools and insights from years of working with families and couples navigating conflict, attachment styles, and the pressures of blended family life. While this episode isn’t directly about co-parenting, the truth is this: strong co-parenting starts with a strong partnership. Everything discussed here — communication patterns, repair after conflict, emotional regulation, and understanding attachment — directly impacts how we show up in our homes. In this episode, you’ll learn: • Why couples get stuck in repetitive arguments • What “healthy repair” actually looks like • How attachment styles influence conflict • Practical tools to de-escalate tough conversations • What emotional safety really means in marriage Greg is currently accepting new clients. 📍 Deer Creek Counseling 🔗www.DeerCreekCounsel.com 📧 DeerCreekCounsel@gmail.com 📞 913-703-7524 Part Two of this conversation — focused on trauma, triggers, and reparenting yourself — will be released next week. If this episode resonates, share it with your partner or someone walking through marriage in a blended family. Strong marriages build strong families. Thanks for tuning in to this Co-Parenting with Grace Production * New episodes every Tuesday & shorts every Thursday * Subscribe, follow, and leave a review to help us grow! Explore more: 📌 Website 📸 Instagram 💌 Join the email list for updates, freebies, and behind-the-scenes love! Have a story to share or a topic you want covered? Email us: jodi@coparentingwithgracepodcast.com ⚖️ This podcast is for support and community. It does not replace legal, medical, or therapeutic advice.

    1h 17m
4.8
out of 5
25 Ratings

About

I’m Jodi Grace—a stepmom, wife, and co-parent showing up for the hard conversations. On this podcast, we explore what it really takes to raise kids across households—with empathy, resilience, and a whole lot of grace. 

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