In this Mapping the Gap workshop, you’ll learn how to uncover what’s really driving a recurring conflict—and how to begin transforming it into collaboration.
Sat 16th May 6-8pm CEST
👉🏿👉🏻👉🏽Register here 👈🏼👈🏾👈🏿
• identify the dynamics driving a recurring conflict
• understand what you and the other person actually want
• see why the strategies you’ve been using haven’t worked
• begin discovering solutions that work better for everyone
This is not a lecture.
You’ll be guided through a practical process you can immediately apply to a real conflict in your own family.
Many participants say that simply mapping the conflict changes how they see the entire situation.
Bring a Real Conflict
“The Mapping the Gap workshop was eye-opening for me—especially hearing my daughter tell me what she wants from our relationship. I had no idea. She was also surprised by what I want from our relationship. She’d thought I wanted control for control’s sake. I’m curious what changes this new perspective will bring.” — Rita Emmer, St. Louis, MO
Mapping the Gap introduces the first step in the Family Conflict Transformation Series, a four-part framework for preventing and repairing family conflict.
After this workshop, participants will have the option to continue with additional sessions exploring:
• how to stay connected with what’s important to you
• how to understand what matters to the other person
• how to co-create agreements that work better for everyone
Hi. I’m Lisa.
I’ve spent the last two decades learning, practicing, and teaching hundreds of parents how to prevent family conflicts. I’ve shared the discoveries I’ve made and the workshops I’ve created about collaboration with people on six continents and a wide variety of organizations including Stanford University, public and private schools, home school consortiums, and Fortune 500 companies. I started doing this work because I made a commitment to not have kids until I had tools to do things differently than my parents did. My children are teenagers now and I’ve never put them in a time out or intentionally punished them.
Parents usually feel judged by their kids, their partners, their in-laws, other parents, and (the harshest critics of all) themselves. I see what every family member does through a judgment-free lens which results in robust conflict transformation that takes place in a compassionate container.
You can find out more about my approach at StopFamilyConflict.com