Client Success Stories

Starting Over

& Choosing

Herself

Case Study 05

Renee's Story

From Invisible to Unstoppable

The Challenge

Renee was thirty-eight, a single mother of a seven-year-old daughter, and eighteen months out of a relationship that had, in her words, taken pieces of her she was not sure she would get back. The relationship had not been physically harmful. It had been emotionally diminishing in the consistent, low-grade way that leaves a person questioning their perception of reality. She had left. That part was done. But leaving had not restored what the relationship had taken.
She came to coaching describing herself as a bad mother. Not because she was neglecting her daughter in any practical sense, but because she was so emotionally depleted that she felt absent even when she was physically present. She was going through the motions of parenting a child she loved deeply while feeling like she had nothing genuine left to give.

The Emotional Struggle

Renee carried a specific and painful

form of guilt that is common among mothers who have been through difficult relationships: the belief that her own pain was a betrayal of her child. That she did not have the right to be struggling when she had a little girl who needed her to be okay. That her healing was somehow in competition with her mothering.
This belief was keeping her from seeking or accepting any real support, because accepting support felt like admitting she was not okay, and not being okay felt like failing her daughter. The guilt and the depletion were feeding each other in a cycle that she could not break alone.

The Process

The Coaching Process

Gina addressed the guilt directly and early because it was the gate through which everything else needed to pass. Renee needed to understand, not intellectually but at a felt level, that her healing was not separate from her daughter’s wellbeing but foundational to it. That the most important thing she could model for a seven-year-old girl was a woman who valued herself enough to take her own pain seriously and do something about it.
That reframe did not dissolve the guilt immediately. But it gave Renee a different story to hold alongside it. A story in which seeking support was an act of mothering rather than a retreat from it.
The Reconnect work focused on identifying what the relationship had taken and naming it clearly. The Rebuild phase focused on reconstructing her sense of her own perception and judgment, which the relationship had significantly eroded, and on establishing what she would and would not accept going forward, in relationships, in friendships, and in her relationship with herself.

The Outcome

Five months into coaching, Renee described a moment that she said marked the shift. She was reading to her daughter at bedtime, and for the first time in what felt like years, she was actually there. Not performing the bedtime routine. Actually present inside it. She could feel the weight of her daughter against her side. She was not somewhere else in her head.

She sent Gina a message the next morning that said simply: I came back.

The work continued after that. But that moment was the moment Renee knew she was going to be okay, and that her daughter was going to be raised by a woman who knew her own worth. That was what she had come for. And it was what the work produced.

Ready to do the honest work?

If Maria’s story resonates with you, it might be time to stop administering your life and start living it. Let’s talk.