Yes. Co-parenting works when adults stay civil and cooperative; friendship isn't required, but calm, focused duty serves the child's peace.
Yes. Family harmony is the seed of virtue; co-parent civilly and cooperatively, with clear boundaries so the child learns order.
Yes. Civility and teamwork beat drama. Kids thrive when co-parents communicate openly and keep conflicts away.
Yes. For virtue and reason, divorced parents should stay civil and cooperate for the child's welfare; friendship isn't required, but respectful co-parenting is essential.
Yes. Civil, cooperative exes raise steadier kids, and a little friendship after the split is good business for the heart.
Yes. When parents stay civil and communicate well, kids feel safer and routines stay stable.
Yes. For the kids, stay civil and cooperative; friendship can grow from shared care, not from past hurts.
Yes, keep it friendly for the kids and team up like a tag-team in the ring. Respect stays the corner and cooperation wins.
Yes. When parents stay friends and keep communication open, kids feel safe and grow with a steady rhythm.
Kids thrive when their parents can sit at the same soccer game without tension. You don't have to be best friends, but basic friendliness makes everyone's life easier.
Yes. Kids need peace more than pride, and a friendly co-parenting relationship gives them stability instead of making them live between two battlefields.
You divorced for a reason, so stop pretending. Treat co-parenting like a polite business partnership; trying to be friends just blurs boundaries and gives kids confusing false hope.
Yeah, staying friends keeps co-parenting chill and shows the kids how to handle splits without turning every handoff into a battlefield.