Growyn logo ✦ Growyn Together · Family Conversation Guide

The Conversation
That Changes Everything.

7 guided family sessions — use this together after completing each module. Two people. Two workbooks. One honest conversation.

Session 1Session 2Session 3Session 4Session 5Session 6Session 7

This guide belongs to

What this guide is

Each workbook — Teen and Adult — has separate reflection work. This guide is what you use together after both of you have completed a module. It gives you structure for a real conversation: shared questions, ground rules, and a closing ritual. You don't have to have all the answers. You just have to show up honestly.

The only rule

This is not a therapy session, a performance review, or a lecture. It is a conversation between two people who both have something to learn and something to offer. Treat it that way.

Ground Rules — Every Session

1

No interrupting. The speaker finishes before the listener responds.

2

No fixing. If someone shares something hard, your job is to listen, not solve.

3

No minimizing. "It's not that big a deal" shuts conversations down.

4

No phones. The outside world can wait 30 minutes.

5

You can pass. Nobody is forced to answer every question. But try.

6

What's shared here stays here. These conversations are private.

The first session or two might feel strange. That's normal. Push through the awkward — it gets easier, and it's worth it.

1
Session 1 of 7
Know Who You Are
Self-Awareness

Purpose of This Conversation

For BOTH of you to share something real about who you are — and to practice seeing each other a little more clearly.

How to Start

Start here: each person picks ONE answer from their workbook to share out loud. You don't have to share everything. Just something honest.

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Each person: What's one strength you have that you think the other person doesn't fully see or appreciate?
2Each person: What's one thing you're still figuring out about yourself — something you don't fully understand yet?
3Together: What's one thing you've both noticed about each other that you've never actually said out loud?
Ground Rule Reminder: No fixing. No advice. Just listen and say “thank you for sharing that.”

Closing Ritual

Each person names one quality about the other that is genuinely unique and real.

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
2
Session 2 of 7
Stop Living for the Audience
Other People's Opinions

Purpose of This Conversation

To help each other see that the pressure to perform for others is something both generations feel — just in different arenas.

How to Start

Parent: share a real story from your past first. This sets the tone and gives your teen permission to be honest.

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Parent: What's something you chose — or didn't do — because of what others would think? What would you do differently?
2Teen: What's one thing you hold back or change about yourself around certain people? Why?
3Together: Who are the 3–5 people whose opinions actually matter to each of you? Do your lists overlap?
Ground Rule Reminder: No judgment about what the other person cares about. Everyone's pressures are real to them.

Closing Ritual

Each person says: “One thing I appreciate about you that has nothing to do with how you look or what you achieve is...”

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
3
Session 3 of 7
Gratitude Changes Everything
Gratitude

Purpose of This Conversation

To notice what's actually good in your lives — and in each other — before moving on to what's hard.

How to Start

Before discussing anything, spend two minutes in silence where each person writes 3 things they're grateful for right now. Then share.

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Each person: Share one thing on your gratitude list that the other person might be surprised by.
2Parent: Tell your teen about a hard season in your life and what you eventually found to be grateful for in it.
3Together: Is there something about your relationship with each other that you're both grateful for but rarely say out loud?
Ground Rule Reminder: Nobody minimizes anyone else's gratitude or says “you should be grateful for...” Gratitude is chosen, not assigned.

Closing Ritual

Each person tells the other one specific, genuine thing about THEM that they are grateful for.

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
4
Session 4 of 7
Own It
Accountability

Purpose of This Conversation

For both of you to practice taking ownership in front of each other. Not to assign blame — just to model accountability.

How to Start

Parent goes first. Share a real mistake, walk through what happened, what you owned, what you learned. No “buts.”

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Parent: Share a mistake you've made and how you took responsibility. What did owning it change?
2Teen: Is there something you've been making excuses about that you actually want to take ownership of? (You choose what to share.)
3Together: Is there something between the two of you — a tension, a hurt — that hasn't been fully owned by either side?
Ground Rule Reminder: This is not a hearing. If a real issue comes up, agree to give it its own separate conversation. Stay on the theme of personal accountability.

Closing Ritual

Each person says: “One thing I could do better in our relationship is...” Keep it about yourself only.

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
5
Session 5 of 7
Empathy Is Your Secret Strength
Empathy

Purpose of This Conversation

To genuinely try to understand each other's experience — not to agree, not to fix, just to understand.

How to Start

The rule for this entire conversation: after each person shares, the listener says back what they heard before responding. No skipping this step.

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Teen: What's something you wish your parent understood better about what it's like to be you right now?
2Parent: What's something you wish your teen understood about your life — the pressures, the fears, what you carry?
3Together: What's one way each of you could show more empathy to the other in daily life — something small and practical?
Ground Rule Reminder: The listener's job is understanding, not rebuttal. If you feel defensive, that's information — sit with it before responding.

Closing Ritual

Each person says: “One thing I heard you say that I'm going to try to remember is...”

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
6
Session 6 of 7
Play the Long Game
Patience

Purpose of This Conversation

To release the pressure of timeline and remind each other that growth — for both of you — is a long, non-linear process.

How to Start

Start by each person sharing something they're currently being patient with. It can be big or small.

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Parent: Share something in your life that took much longer than expected and was ultimately worth the wait.
2Teen: Where do you feel the most pressure to “have it together” right now? Is any of that pressure coming from our relationship?
3Together: What's one expectation — spoken or unspoken — that might be creating unnecessary pressure between you two right now?
Ground Rule Reminder: If the teen identifies pressure that's coming from the parent, the parent's job is to listen, not defend. Say: “Thank you for telling me that. I'm going to think about it.”

Closing Ritual

Each person offers one encouragement about the other's growth: “I've seen you grow in...”

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
7
Session 7 of 7
You Are Already Enough
Worth

Purpose of This Conversation

For each person to hear — from the other — that they are genuinely enough as they are. This is the most important session.

How to Start

There are no trick questions here. Just two people telling each other what they genuinely see and value. Take your time.

Together Questions

Work through these together. Remember: listen first, respond second.

1Parent: Tell your teen one specific, genuine thing about who they are — not what they do — that you believe is truly unique and valuable.
2Teen: Tell your parent one thing you appreciate about who they are as a PERSON — not just as a parent — something real.
3Together: What's one thing you each want the other to carry with them from this program?
Ground Rule Reminder: No minimizing. When someone gives you a genuine compliment, the only response is: “Thank you. I'm going to try to believe that.”

Closing Ritual

End with a hug, a handshake, a high five — whatever feels right for your family. You did this together. That means something.

Teen's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:

Parent's Reflection

One word that describes this conversation:
Something I want to remember:
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You Did This Together.

7 sessions. 7 real conversations. Before you close this guide, sit together and answer these last questions out loud.

What was the moment in this program that felt most important — personally?
What did you learn about the other person that you didn't know before?
How do you want to keep this kind of conversation going?
What's one thing you want to say to each other right now?
"Real conversations don't end when the workbooks are finished. The habit of being real with each other is the whole thing. Keep it open."

Teen signs

Parent signs

The full program

Each conversation starts with the workbooks.

Before each session, both of you complete the matching module in your own workbook — then bring what you wrote into the room.