19 articles across 7 categories, plus 4 reference tools — built for parents in active high-conflict family court, and for the attorneys, therapists, and evaluators working these cases.
Glossary, FAQ, and printable checklists for documentation and red-flag pattern recognition.
Plain-English definitions for the legal, procedural, and psychological terms that show up in contested family court cases.
Open → ReferenceAnswers to the questions readers actually ask — about cases, documentation, court strategy, working with professionals, and the books.
Open → ChecklistWhat records actually help your case — and what records hurt it. Printable. Built from the documentation chapter.
Open → ChecklistThe behavioral patterns that signal a high-conflict case, organized by category. Pattern recognition, not diagnosis.
Open →In-depth articles drawn directly from the book's content. Pick the category that matches where you are right now.
Past the buzzword, into the operating definition: what HCPs do, how they think, and why it matters for your case strategy.
Why behaving with integrity isn't naive in high-conflict litigation — it's the most underrated source of leverage in the case.
The specific gaslighting moves that show up in family court — and the documentation habit that makes them irrelevant.
Why HCPs project — and how to counter accusations that mirror the accuser's own conduct without taking the bait.
How smear campaigns work, why they're effective, and the counter-strategy that doesn't require you to fight them in public.
When the HCP pulls third parties into the conflict — and how to handle the people they've recruited without escalating.
The records that matter, the records that don't, and the difference between a useful evidence file and a self-defeating one.
OurFamilyWizard, TalkingParents, AppClose — what they actually do, what features matter for court, and how to choose.
Why HCPs often beat themselves on the stand — and the questions a prepared attorney can ask to let them do it.
A practical preparation routine for the high-stakes days — sleep, materials, mental rehearsal, and what to do at the door.
The pattern of motions, filings, and procedural moves designed to drain you — and the legal tools that exist to stop it.
Why "any settlement is better than trial" is wrong in high-conflict cases — and how to know when to push and when to settle.
Why standard mediation often fails in high-conflict cases — and how to use the process strategically anyway.
What to look for, what red flags signal a bad fit, and the interview questions that will surface the right counsel.
How GALs investigate, what they report, and how to interact with them in a way that builds rather than burns credibility.
What a custody evaluation actually involves, how to prepare authentically, and how not to try to "win" it.
What alienation actually looks like, why it's so hard to address in court, and the documentation pattern that gives a judge something to act on.
What to do when a high-conflict ex weaponizes the child protection system — immediate steps, longer-term documentation, and what not to do.
The litigation playbook. Understanding HCPs, preparing your case with integrity, countering manipulative tactics, cross-examining HCPs in court, presenting your case, and protecting your mental health.
100 powerful exercises to translate the book into a buildable case file — documentation audits, communication reviews, cross-examination prep, and trigger mapping.
The foundational book on coparenting with a high-conflict ex. The framework, the strategies, the worldview shift. Best place to start if you're not yet in active litigation.
If you're in an active custody case, the book and workbook are the complete playbook. For case-specific consulting or representation, Carl's law firm offers services tailored to high-conflict family court.