Welcome to Stop Sinking in Guilt
Welcome to Stop Sinking in Guilt
Stop Sinking in Guilt
You are here because you already know the guilt is running things. You feel it in the moment your child pushes back - the flood, the urgency, the decision you make to stop the feeling rather than the one you know is right. And you know, a few minutes later, that you have made things harder rather than easier.
The good news is this: the guilt is not the problem. The problem is what you have been doing with it. And that is exactly what this course gives you the method to change.
The complete system for divorced parents who know guilt is running their decisions and want a method to change it. The Anchor Point Method is a three-question framework that takes 60 seconds and works in real time, in the moment, under pressure, when your child is looking at you with those eyes.
Includes the 45-minute core audio
Guilt vs. Wisdom Decision Filter
10 Guilt-Trigger Scenarios with grounded responses
Anchor Point Decision Template,
250 Questions Kids Ask About Separation and Divorce,
15 Boundary Scripts for Divorce Moments
Overcompensation Reset Checklist.
All 7 parts unlocked immediately on enrolment.
Work through the parts in order. Start with Part 1 today. Everything is unlocked now. The Anchor Point Method takes 60 seconds to run. You will use it for the first time before the end of the day.
Testimonial 1
"I have been divorced for two years and my daughter had completely learned that crying long enough changed my answer. I knew it. She knew it. And I kept doing it anyway because the guilt was louder than anything else. The Anchor Point Method gave me the three questions I needed. The first time I held firm through a full meltdown and drove away feeling settled rather than awful, I genuinely did not recognise myself. That was three weeks ago. It is still holding."— Natalie R., divorced two years, one daughter aged 8
Testimonial 2
"The Overcompensation Reset Checklist in Part 7 is the piece I needed most and did not know existed. I was saying yes to things I could not afford, things I did not believe in, things that were making my son more demanding and me more depleted — and I kept doing it because saying no felt like punishing him for the divorce. One question changed everything: would I have said yes to this before the divorce? The answer was almost always no. That is the only question I needed."— James K., divorced eighteen months, one son aged 11