Co-parenting and extracurricular activities without losing your mind

There is a particular kind of dread that sets in around Tuesday afternoons, standing on the sideline of a soccer field, scanning the parking lot, wondering if your ex is going to show up, and if they do, where exactly you're supposed to put your eyes. Nobody warned you that divorce would turn a six-year-old's travel league into a diplomatic summit you didn't sign up to attend. So what do you do with the fact that your kid's entire life, the recitals, the games, the science fair, the belt ceremonies, is now a shared calendar event with someone you are actively trying to emotionally detach from? How do you show up fully for your child when just being in the same parking lot with their other parent takes everything you have? These affirmations aren't magic. They won't make the handoff less awkward or stop you from rehearsing what you'd say if your ex says *that thing* again. But repeating the right words before you walk through that gym door can be the difference between reacting and choosing. That's what this list is for, something to hold onto when the bleachers feel like a minefield.

Why these words matter

Here's the thing nobody says out loud: the activities themselves aren't the hard part. The hard part is performing functional adulthood next to someone who knows exactly how to get under your skin, while your child watches every micro-expression on your face for information about whether they're allowed to just enjoy their own swim meet. The words you repeat to yourself before you walk into those situations aren't affirmations in the greeting-card sense. They're more like guardrails. A way of reminding your nervous system what role you're playing today. Not ex. Not wounded person. Parent. Researchers at UCSF spent a decade reviewing how divorce actually affects children's long-term adjustment, and what Kelly found in 2000 was striking: it's not the divorce itself that drives lasting harm. It's sustained parental conflict and the quality of parenting that follows. Custody arrangements, school schedules, who sits where at the championship game, none of it matters as much as whether the adults in the room can hold themselves together. That finding reframes everything. It means the work you're doing right now, the deliberate, unglamorous work of managing your own reactions, is the most protective thing you can do for your kid. Not perfect co-parenting. Not a unified front. Just: quality parenting, consistently, even when it's hard. Especially when it's hard. The affirmations on this page are practice for exactly that.

Affirmations to practice

  1. I am a good parent affirmation
  2. I can only control myself not my ex
  3. I am doing my best for my kids and that is enough
  4. I am the best parent for my child
  5. I am doing enough as a parent
  6. I am strong enough to raise my kids alone
  7. I am more than the label single mom
  8. I am exactly who my kids need
  9. I am grateful my co-parent is present in our child's life
  10. I can forgive and still set boundaries
  11. I choose peace over conflict co-parenting
  12. I release what I cannot control divorce
  13. I accept that my co-parent is not perfect
  14. I am worthy of respect co-parenting
  15. I am the safe parent affirmation
  16. I will always be their parent
  17. I trust my ex to take care of our kids
  18. I have the strength to get through this parenting
  19. I am healing one step at a time single parent
  20. my heart aches for my kids divorce

How to actually use these

Pick one or two that actually land, the ones that feel slightly uncomfortable, not the ones that feel obvious. Comfortable affirmations slide off. The slightly-resistant ones are usually pointing at something real. Say them before the event, not during. In the car, in the bathroom before you leave the house, or as a note in your phone you pull up while still in the parking lot. Put them somewhere friction-free, a phone lock screen, a sticky note on the steering wheel, because you won't remember to look for them when you need them most. Don't expect to believe them immediately. The point isn't conviction. The point is repetition until the thought becomes available to you in the moment you need it. Think of it less like reciting truth and more like loading a response you actually want to have.

Frequently asked

How do I handle extracurricular events when my ex and I can't be in the same space without conflict?
Separate attendance is a completely legitimate strategy, not a failure. If splitting games, recitals, or meets by rotation keeps the event calm for your child, that matters more than optics. Give your child advance notice so they're not caught off guard, and frame it neutrally, 'Dad's coming to this one, I'll be there for the next' removes any suggestion that the split is their fault.
What if repeating 'I am a good parent' feels completely hollow when I'm still so angry at my ex?
That hollow feeling is almost the point. You're not trying to convince yourself you feel fine, you're trying to create just enough distance between the anger and your actions that you don't walk into your kid's event leading with it. Hollow is fine. Hollow still works. The goal is a two-second gap between the feeling and the behavior, not the absence of the feeling.
Do affirmations actually do anything in high-conflict co-parenting situations?
The evidence on self-affirmation suggests it works best when it's grounded in something you genuinely value, in this case, being a present, steady parent. The research on co-parenting and child outcomes is clear that parenting quality, not co-parenting harmony, is what protects kids. Affirmations that reinforce your commitment to that quality aren't wishful thinking; they're rehearsal for behavior that research shows actually matters.
My ex signs the kids up for activities without telling me, then expects me to coordinate. How do I handle that?
This is a boundary issue before it's a scheduling issue. A shared digital calendar, one both parties update, removes the 'I forgot to tell you' problem and creates a paper trail if things escalate legally. If it's a recurring pattern, it's worth raising in mediation or with a parenting coordinator rather than trying to resolve it activity by activity.
Is it better to attend activities together or separately when co-parenting is difficult?
Research on co-parenting quality consistently shows that low-conflict parallel parenting outperforms forced cooperative contact when hostility is high. For your child, two calm separate parents at separate events will almost always serve them better than two tense parents sharing a bleacher. 'Together' is not inherently better. Calm is better.