Co-Creative Parenting
Private Coaching / Consulting
Focused attention on you and your needs.
—60 mins, online—
Full refund after 1st session if not of high value to you.
Co-Creative Parenting
Foundations Workshop
Basecamp for your journey.
—90 mins, online—
Co-Creative Parenting basics, and tools to use now.
Co-Creative Parenting
Group Coaching Series
Learn and grow with a small cohort.
—Four 60 min sessions, online—
Build your practice with support and community.
Why Co-Creative Parenting
Growth for Both is about rethinking parenting—not as a daily struggle to control our kids, but as a shared journey of growth. The parent–child relationship is one of the most meaningful and enduring we’ll ever have, and because it asks so much of us, it also offers one of the richest opportunities to grow into the people we most want to become. Here, you’ll find coaching, classes, and resources to help you align your parenting with your values, enjoy a deeper connection with your children now, and equip them with the skills they’ll need for the life you want for them. At the same time, you’ll discover how to step more fully into the life you want for yourself—the kind of adult, parent, and human you aspire to be. Parenting doesn’t have to mean choosing between your child’s thriving and your own. With the right mindset, tools, and support, it can mean growth for both.
About Aaron Eden
I’ve spent nearly thirty years helping parents, teachers, and communities rethink how we raise and educate our children. My work has taken me around the world—partnering with schools, learning centers, nonprofits, and families—all with a single goal: to replace the daily battles of control with relationships built on trust, creativity, and shared responsibility.
I’m not just a coach and educator; I’m also a parent of three self-directed learners. I know firsthand how challenging it can be to let go of old scripts, and how rewarding it is to discover new ways of connecting with our kids. Along the way, I’ve drawn from restorative practices, non-violent communication, and applied mindfulness to guide both my own parenting and the work I do with others.
What I’ve seen again and again is that the parent–child relationship is one of the richest opportunities for growth in our lives—not just for our kids, but for us as adults. When we shift from command-and-control to co-creation and shared responsibility, we not only help our children build the skills they’ll need for their future, but we also step more fully into the kind of parents, partners, and people we want to be.