There's a Window. And Most Parents Don't Know It's Closing.

Most parents wait too long. By the time they realise their teenager has stopped talking to them, the distance feels permanent. But there is a window before that happens. A window to listen differently. To speak less. To build the kind of trust that makes a teenager want to share things rather than hide them. This post is for parents who can still feel that window and want to know how to use it.

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When Something Feels Off

Parents often notice something is wrong with their teenager before they can name it. This post helps you trust that instinct, recognise the early warning signs of teen depression and anxiety, and take one small step before the silence becomes a wall. You are not overreacting. You are paying attention. That matters.

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The Question Nobody Asks

Most meaningful conversations begin after the first answer. Whether you're wondering how to get your teenager to open up or how to talk to an employee about personal struggles, the second question often changes everything. Learn why staying in the conversation a little longer can strengthen trust, improve communication, and help you notice concerns before they become bigger problems.

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Most Parents Are Looking for the Right Conversation. They're Looking in the Wrong Place.

Teenagers do not open up when you sit them down and ask how they are doing. They open up when the pressure drops. The car. The kitchen. A walk. Side by side instead of face to face. This post is about why where you are when you talk matters more than what you say — and one conversation with Maddie that proved it.

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What Didn’t I See?

The signs that something is wrong with your teenager are rarely obvious. They are small shifts — less talking, less laughing, a door that stays closed. Parents miss them because each one feels like a phase. This post names what early teen mental health warning signs actually look like and what to do when you notice them.

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I Ran Out of Options. Not Resolve.

Some parents of struggling teens reach a moment where they have tried everything and the distance still is not closing. This post names that experience honestly — the exhaustion, the silence, the floodgate that opens when someone finally finds a safe room. For parents who have run out of options but not resolve.

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My Kid Would Tell Me. Are You Willing to Bet Their Life on It?

"My kid would tell me if something was really wrong." It sounds like confidence. It functions like a blind spot. This post is about what that assumption costs parents — and what awareness actually looks like before it is too late.

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What Maddie Taught Me About Silence

I was looking for silence. For withdrawal. For the obvious signs. Maddie never became that kid. She stayed funny, sharp, connected — and I missed everything underneath. What I know now is that the signal is not always what you expect. Sometimes it is the kid who is always okay.

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The Question Parents Ask Me When the House Is Quiet

Most parents are not looking for a diagnosis. They are looking for reassurance that they are not failing their child. If you have ever felt something was off with your teenager but could not name it, you are not overthinking it. You are paying attention. That matters more than you think.

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Your Teenager Isn't Pushing You Away. They're Testing Whether You'll Stay.

Your teen has gone quiet and everything you try makes the gap wider. This post isn't about fixing them — it's about not losing them while they figure out how to come back. Five concrete approaches from a father and EQ specialist, including the one most parents never think to try.

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Maddie Died by Suicide 11 Years Ago, Here's What I Want Every Parent to Know

Chris Coulter lost his daughter Maddie to suicide in 2015. Eleven years later, her legacy is saving lives through The MentorWell — a parent support ecosystem built around earlier awareness, real conversations, and the belief that noticing sooner changes everything.

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I Spent Nine Years Trying to Get Back to the Person I Was Before I Lost Maddie. Last Year I Finally Stopped.

Chris Coulter lost his daughter Maddie to suicide in 2015. For nine years he tried to recover the person he was before. Then something shifted — and Maddie came back not as a loss, but as a presence. A personal reflection on grief, purpose, and what it means to finally stop looking backward.

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7 Physical Signs Your Neurodivergent Child Is Emotionally Overwhelmed (Before the Meltdown)

By the time the meltdown happens, the window has already closed. This post covers 7 physical signs neurodivergent kids show before they hit the wall — and what to do in that window. Written by an EQ specialist and parent of a neurodivergent child, grounded in a real conversation from our parent community.

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10 Questions I'd Ask Every Parent at a Dinner Party. But Probably Won't.

Ten questions I'd ask every parent if dinner parties allowed honesty. Not about grades or behaviour — about trust, silence, shame, and fear. Built from 2,000 conversations with parents in 102 countries. These aren't comfortable questions. They're the ones worth sitting with before it's too late to ask them.

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What If Schools Treated Suicide the Way They Treat Fire?

Every school has fire drills, fire exits, and evacuation plans. Suicide is the second leading cause of death among Canadian teenagers and most schools have no plan for it at all. This article explores why schools avoid the conversation, what that silence teaches teens, what actually works, and what parents can do when their child’s school won’t start the conversation. Includes the Teen Signal Check tool.

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I Thought Loving Her Harder Would Save Her. I Was Wrong

When his daughter was hospitalized for the second time, Chris Coulter realised that loving her harder was not going to close the gap. This post explores why teens in crisis need more than one person, why mentorship fills the space between therapy and parenting, and how parents can take a first step before things escalate. Includes the free Teen Signal Check tool.

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How to Listen to Your Teen Without Pushing Them Away

Many parents unintentionally shut down teen communication by jumping into problem-solving mode. This article explains why “fixing” backfires, what teens actually need when they open up, and simple conversation scripts that build emotional safety. Includes warning signs your teen may be struggling and a 2-minute tool to help you assess what’s normal and what needs attention.

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The 7 Questions Parents Ask Me in Private

Parents of struggling teens ask me the same 7 questions in private about exhaustion, isolation, "I'm fine," when to act, and fear of overreacting. These aren't signs of bad parenting. They're signs you're paying attention. If you're noticing changes in your teen and wondering if you should be worried, this is for you. Trust your instincts.

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