Co-Parenting with Internal Locus: United Approach
BY NICOLE LAU
Childhood Internal Locus Building: Ages 0-12
Co-parenting with internal locus requires unity. When both parents model and teach inherent worth consistently, baby receives a clear, strong foundation. When parents are divided - one teaching internal locus, one teaching external locus - baby receives mixed messages and confusion. United co-parenting doesn't mean perfect agreement on everything. It means alignment on the core: your child has inherent worth. This is the foundation you build together.
Why United Approach Matters
Consistency Builds Foundation: When both parents teach the same message (inherent worth), baby internalizes it deeply. Consistency creates security.
Mixed Messages Create Confusion: If one parent says "you're valuable as you are" and the other says "you're only good when you behave," baby doesn't know what to believe.
Undermining Weakens Foundation: If one parent builds internal locus and the other undermines it, the foundation is unstable.
Modeling Partnership: United co-parenting models healthy relationship. Baby learns cooperation, respect, shared values.
Core Alignment: What You Must Agree On
1. Inherent Worth
Agreement: Baby has inherent worth. They're valuable simply because they exist, not because of what they do.
Both Parents:
- Love baby unconditionally
- Celebrate being, not just doing
- Avoid conditional approval
- No "good baby" vs "bad baby" labels
2. Responsive Caregiving
Agreement: Baby's needs matter. We respond promptly and consistently.
Both Parents:
- Respond to cries
- Meet needs consistently
- Don't let baby "cry it out" in infancy
- Respect baby's signals
3. No Comparison
Agreement: Baby develops at their own pace. We don't compare to other babies or push milestones.
Both Parents:
- Honor unique timeline
- Celebrate individual progress
- Avoid milestone anxiety
- Trust baby's development
4. Gentle, Respectful Care
Agreement: Baby deserves gentle touch and respectful handling.
Both Parents:
- Handle baby gently
- Be present during care
- Respect baby's body
- No rough or angry handling
When Parents Have Different Locus Backgrounds
Often, one parent has more internal locus, one has more external locus:
Acknowledge Differences: "I was raised with external locus. You were raised with more internal locus. We're coming from different places."
Commit to Growth: The parent with external locus commits to healing. The parent with internal locus supports this.
Learn Together: Read, discuss, attend parenting classes together. Build shared understanding.
Support Each Other: When one parent slips into external locus patterns, the other gently redirects (not criticizes).
Practical United Co-Parenting
1. Regular Check-Ins
What to Do: Talk regularly about parenting approach. Are we aligned? Where are we struggling?
How:
- Weekly or monthly check-ins
- Discuss what's working, what's not
- Realign when needed
- Support each other
2. Shared Language
What to Do: Use the same language about worth, needs, development.
Examples:
- Both say "I love you" not "good baby"
- Both celebrate being, not just doing
- Both validate feelings
- Both avoid comparison
3. Mutual Support
What to Do: Help each other stay regulated, present, aligned.
How:
- Take turns when one is depleted
- Remind each other of core values
- Don't criticize, support
- Celebrate each other's growth
4. United Front with Others
What to Do: Present united approach to extended family, friends, caregivers.
How:
- "We don't use good/bad labels"
- "We respond to cries"
- "We celebrate their unique timeline"
- Support each other's boundaries
When You Disagree
You won't agree on everything. That's normal:
Discuss Privately: Don't argue in front of baby. Discuss disagreements privately.
Find Core Agreement: Even if you disagree on method, can you agree on core (inherent worth)?
Compromise: Find middle ground when possible. Both parents' input matters.
Seek Help: If you can't align, see couples therapist or parenting coach.
For Single Parents
If you're parenting alone:
You Can Still Build Internal Locus: One consistent parent is enough. You don't need two.
Build Support Network: Find others who share your values. Create consistency through your network.
Protect from Undermining: If co-parent undermines internal locus, set boundaries. Protect your child's foundation.
The Bottom Line
Co-parenting with internal locus requires unity. Align on core: inherent worth, responsive caregiving, no comparison, gentle care. When both parents model and teach the same foundation consistently, baby receives a clear, strong message. Mixed messages create confusion. United approach creates security. You don't have to agree on everything, but align on the core. This is the foundation you build together.
Next: Extended Family and Internal Locus - Setting Boundaries
Childhood Internal Locus Building series: Practical guidance for raising children with inherent worth.
β Nicole Lau, 2026
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