A life coach will help you get clear on what you really want, helping you let go of what you’ve felt until now you ‘should’ want.
A life coach will shine a light on what’s working, your strengths and helping you see yourself and your circumstances in a new light.
A life coach will help you identify your hiccup areas, help you to anticipate them and discover strategies to overcome them so you rock your results!
Your life coach will support you to take action where you have previously procrastinated.
A life coach will hold the space for you so you tap into and trust your their inner wisdom.
Through working with a life coach you’ll reconnect with your mojo and feel more connected with yourself and others.
A life coach can help you let go of thinking that doesn’t support you so you finally believe you are good enough.
Life coaching gives you your power back so you no longer believe you live in the effect of other peoples actions and start creating the life and work you actually want.
Working with a life coach will help you have more successful conversations with your family, friends, colleagues, prospective employers & clients.
Life coaching offers you the gift of loving your life and work again
Pretty cool, right?
If you’re curious to experience the benefits of coaching then reach out to some coaches who you resonate with and have a chat. If that’s me, get in touch and book a call.
Thank you for mentioning how a life coach can help you communicate with family members more effectively. My son has been having trouble with one of his friends ever since they got into a fight at a party but has trouble expressing his emotions when I try to talk to him about it. Maybe he should find a coaching service that will allow us to have more meaningful conversations together.
Coaching is great for humans of all ages and stages, as is being encouraged to press pause and get curious about what we want to experience in our lives.
As parents we want our kids to open up to us and share what’s happening and how they’re feeling yet sometimes we’re not the right person for them in that moment, for that purpose.
Have you asked your son what he would like? Does he feel he has trouble expressing his emotions?
Does he know what he would like this friendship to look like?
The link you added looks like an organisation specialising in working with teens and parents doing just what you want, support to have those meaningful conversations together. I used to codirect a social enterprise Potential in Me and created a Families program thats still delivered: Connected Families for all the family and Coaching Approach for Parents to support parents enhance their communication and connection.
There’s loads of support available for parents and young people. Seek and ye a shall find!