DiscoverBitch Is A Bad Word: A Domestic Violence Podcast on Healing and EmpowermentCo-Parenting After Abuse: When Communication Becomes the New Battlefield
Co-Parenting After Abuse: When Communication Becomes the New Battlefield

Co-Parenting After Abuse: When Communication Becomes the New Battlefield

Update: 2025-12-16
Share

Description

Besties, we’re going straight to the heart of the chaos: co-parenting after domestic abuse. Because the truth is this. Abuse does not end when the relationship ends. It shifts. It morphs. And it often gets weaponized through communication, schedules, school issues, and family court.


In this episode of Bitch Is A Bad Word, host Lindsay Abernathy sits down with Steven Nixon, CEO and Family Law Attorney at Talking Parents, and Heather Ruiz, Marketing Director, to break down why your inbox becomes the new battlefield and how one app can create clarity, proof, and peace.


We unpack how post-separation abuse shows up as communication chaos, why texts, emails, and DMs can backfire in court, and how Talking Parents creates a secure, unalterable record that helps establish patterns, reduce legal fees, and protect your mental health.


This is not about “winning.”

This is about documentation, boundaries, and safety.


We've got your back, Besties.


Need Help?

If you or someone you love is experiencing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) or visit www.thehotline.org

-----

Support Our Sponsor:

TALKINGPARENTS APP

The #1 App For More Confident Co-Parenting

Click to Learn More: https://talkingparents.com/biabw


We’re teaming up with TalkingParentsApp to give the Bestie Gang one of the best tools for the Bestie Toolkit, the power to communicate without chaos. Because as much as we love reading your “Texties from your Exties,” some messages are better left professionally documented.


If you’re co-parenting with a narcissist, living through post-separation abuse, or just trying to protect your peace, the TalkingParents app will save your sanity. Every message. Every call. Every receipt. Safely logged. Documented bad words, gaslighting, word salads, or being run around more than a Target cart on a Sunday. Just boundaries, receipts, and your peace of mind.


👉 Follow @TalkingParentsApp on Instagram & listen to the full episode of this Bitch Is A Bad Word ep now.



What You’ll Learn in This Episode


• Why post-separation abuse often shows up as “communication chaos”

• How Talking Parents helps survivors create boundaries and court-ready documentation

• Why “I never got that message” and “I didn’t see it” stops working

• How courts use Talking Parents in high-conflict custody cases, DV cases, and supervised visitation

• How to document patterns without living on the hamster wheel



The 5 Talking Parents Features Every Bestie Needs


• Secure messaging with a court-ready record

• Recorded audio calls with transcripts

• Recorded video calls with transcripts

• Shared calendar with edit history and notifications

• Payments and reimbursement requests with built-in documentation


Plus:

Info Library, Vault storage, and a private journal to track what’s happening while protecting your peace. 

About Talking Parents

Talking Parents was built in family court for families navigating high-conflict co-parenting, custody disputes, and domestic violence situations. The platform creates an unalterable record of communication that courts trust and survivors rely on. It helps reduce conflict, establish patterns, and remove emotion from exchanges when safety and accountability matter most.


Listen wherever you get your podcasts

Watch: YouTube

Join: Patreon

Follow: Instagram TikTok

Subscribe: Newsletter


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Comments 
loading
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
1.0x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Co-Parenting After Abuse: When Communication Becomes the New Battlefield

Co-Parenting After Abuse: When Communication Becomes the New Battlefield