By: Priya Nair
How Sophia Rethinks Support, One Honest Page at a Time
When families split into two homes, most of the focus lands on structure. Schedules get arranged. Responsibilities get divided. Life keeps moving.
But for children, the real challenge is not the structure.
It is everything they feel and do not say.
With The Road Between Two Homes, Sophia Rose Lancer shifts the conversation toward that quieter side of the experience. Not by offering instructions, but by creating space for children to understand themselves in the middle of it.
Built from Experience, Not Assumption
Sophia’s starting point was personal.
Growing up between two homes, she saw how the same situation played out differently even within her own family. She and her brothers lived through the same change, yet each processed it in their own way.
That insight stayed with her.
It challenged the idea that there is a standard emotional response to family transitions. There is not.
Some children become quiet. Others react strongly. Some seem unaffected on the surface while carrying more than anyone notices.
That complexity is what shaped the workbook.
Why a Workbook Changes the Dynamic
Instead of creating something to be read once, Sophia built something to be used.
That distinction matters.
Children do not always process emotions through conversation. In many cases, they need time and privacy before they can even begin to understand what they are feeling.
A workbook offers that.
It gives them a place to write, reflect, and respond without pressure. It removes the expectation of having to explain everything out loud in real time.
And sometimes, that is exactly what makes expression possible.
It becomes less about answering questions and more about discovering answers.
The Emotional Mix Most Adults Underestimate
One of the clearest patterns Sophia identified, both in her own life and among the people she surveyed, is that children rarely experience just one emotion during family change.
It is layered.
Sadness can sit alongside anger. Confusion can exist with guilt. Anxiety can show up in subtle ways.
Some children feel pulled between parents. Others struggle with constantly moving between environments. Many feel pressure to act like they are okay, even when they are not.
That last part often goes unnoticed.
A child who appears calm is not always a child who feels stable.
The Mistakes That Complicate Everything
Talking to children about divorce is not easy. And according to Sophia, that is where many well-intentioned mistakes happen.
One of the most common is assuming children are too young to pick up on emotional tension.
They are not.
Even without full context, they feel the shift in energy, the uncertainty, the change in tone.
Another mistake is imbalance. Saying too little leaves children confused. Saying too much can overwhelm them.
And then there is the issue of placement.
When children feel stuck in the middle of adult conflict, the emotional weight multiplies. Carrying messages, sensing pressure to choose sides, or absorbing stress that does not belong to them can leave a lasting impact.
These dynamics are often subtle, but they shape how a child experiences the entire transition.
Creating Safer Ways to Open Up
This is where Sophia’s workbook plays a different role.
It lowers the barrier to communication.
Instead of asking a child to explain everything from scratch, it gives them a starting point. A prompt. A page. Something tangible they can point to.
That small shift makes a big difference.
It turns difficult conversations into something more natural. Less forced. More collaborative.
For many children, it is easier to show what they wrote than to try to say it perfectly.
And in that moment, understanding begins.
A Tool That Extends Beyond the Family
While the workbook is deeply personal, its use is not limited to the home.
Sophia sees real potential in schools and counseling environments, where children often struggle to express what they are going through.
In those settings, having a structured but gentle tool can change how conversations start.
It creates an entry point.
Educators and counselors are not left guessing. Children are not put on the spot. The process becomes more balanced.
This is part of why the workbook is gaining attention in professional spaces.
With support from Dr. Robert Goldman and a pilot program through the Institute of Psychological Resilience, it is beginning to reach environments where guided emotional support is essential.
What Support Actually Looks Like
For parents, Sophia’s message is both simple and challenging.
Children need emotional safety.
That means being able to express what they feel without worrying about how it will affect the adults around them. It means knowing they are not responsible for fixing anything.
When that safety is present, everything else becomes easier.
Adjustment does not happen overnight, but it becomes more manageable.
Support is not about having the perfect response. It is about being present, listening, and creating steadiness even when life feels uncertain.
Consistency Without Pressure
One of the most common concerns in two-home situations is consistency.
Sophia approaches this with nuance.
Yes, children benefit from predictability. Knowing what transition days look like, having routines, and understanding expectations can create a sense of stability.
But consistency does not mean both homes need to operate the same way.
Trying to mirror everything can create unnecessary stress.
What matters more is that each home feels safe. That the child feels secure in both spaces, even if those spaces are different.
Security, not symmetry, is what makes the difference.
The Message That Stays
At the center of everything Sophia created is a message that applies to both children and parents.
For children, it is a reminder that their feelings are valid. That they are not alone. That even if life looks different now, what they feel still matters.
For parents, it is a quiet nudge to look closer.
Children often feel more than they show. And small actions, listening carefully, staying respectful, creating stability, can have a deeper impact than expected.
Looking Ahead
Sophia’s goal is not complicated.
She wants the workbook to reach the children who need it most.
That includes expanding access through schools, counselors, and family support systems. Making it available in the spaces where children are already trying to make sense of change.
Because sometimes, all it takes is one page, one prompt, or one moment of understanding to shift how a child experiences something difficult.
Final Thought
Children do not always have the words for what they are going through.
But that does not mean they do not need to be heard.
What Sophia has created is not just a workbook. It is a way to listen differently.
And in situations where emotions often go unspoken, that can change everything.
You can now get The Road Between Two Homes by Sophia Rose Lancer on Amazon.
A thoughtful workbook designed to help children navigate life between two homes with clarity and emotional support.






