By Carolyn Daly
Sometimes a partnership comes along that has such a profound impact it doesn’t just transform participants, it reshapes the culture of an organization. For Nuya’, Parenting Journey has been that partnership.
Based in Massachusetts, Parenting Journey is an organization that has developed a strengths-based, trauma-informed course designed to equip parents and caregivers with tools to build healthy, resilient family relationships. They have trained over 500 nonprofit partners as course facilitators across the country and internationally, and we are lucky to count ourselves among them. I still remember our first conversations with founder Anne Peretz about bringing the Parenting Journey course to Guatemala. Parenting Journey staff Carolina Grynbal and Cristina Pachano were instrumental in tailoring the PJ curriculum to the context and needs of our communities, and all three came to Guatemala to train our team as facilitators in 2016.
As preparations began, I felt a mix of excitement and nervousness. We were thrilled for women in our communities to access this powerful program, but we also had concerns: Guatemala does not have the same social service infrastructure as the United States. Questions kept me up at night. What would we do if heavy, sensitive topics came up? Who could we refer women to for support if they needed it?
The answer came from the women themselves. While psychologists and professionals were engaged when needed, what surprised us most was the extraordinary power of peer networks. Women became each other’s support system. For many, Parenting Journey was the first time they felt safe enough to share their personal stories, and the encouragement and solidarity they received from one another was profound: “I feel very trusted in this group,” Yesica, a Parenting Journey graduate, told us. “I felt unburdened and heard when I talked about my experiences. I love hearing the life stories of each of the women, and the confidentiality that Nuya’ facilitates.”
The impact was not limited to participants. When our staff completed the Parenting Journey training in 2016, they immediately began weaving its practices into our team culture. At the start of meetings, we began asking simple but meaningful questions:
What is something positive that happened this week? What is one thing you did to take care of yourself?
These rituals deepened our connection as colleagues and gave us greater confidence as leaders. I think often of the stories our staff shared: taking family walks together as an act of self-care, having honest conversations with spouses about finances, family planning, and household management – sometimes for the very first time. Parenting Journey didn’t just change how we work: it transformed our lives and relationships.
The same ripple effects are clear in the communities we serve. Parenting Journey has been instrumental in helping women feel confident and capable as decision-makers. Because of the foundation of autonomy and decision-making skills that the Parenting Journey course provides in our Maternal and Child Wellness program curriculum, women who complete our Women’s Health course the following year feel much more comfortable making decisions about their bodies, their families, and their own health: 79% of women who complete our Women’s Health course use modern contraceptives, compared to just 30% of women in Sololá.
Our most powerful testimonials always come from women graduating from the Parenting Journey course. Women often talk about how it has changed their entire perspective on who they are and what they’re capable of—they take better care of themselves, and they talk about feeling truly valued and worthy. They share how it has impacted their family relationships, from having conversations about money with their husbands for the first time, sharing what they’ve learned with their relatives, or totally changing the dynamics of their relationships with both older and younger children.
“Because of Parenting Journey I feel like a different woman,” Dulce told us. “I’ve learned to value myself, take care of myself, make my opinions heard (because women can have opinions too), and that women can achieve the goals we set for ourselves. There wasn’t a lot of love in my childhood, but I want to change that pattern in my family and raise my son in a house full of love.”
“I’m sorry that the course is coming to a close,” Lucía shared. “In every session I felt heard, and the other women motivated me to keep making progress. Now I feel like a woman who is loved. I’ve learned to make my own decisions and develop new habits in my family, especially with my daughter, who I hope in the future will remember me as a good mother.”
This September marks 500 graduates from our Parenting Journey course in Guatemala since 2016. We could not be more grateful for everything that Parenting Journey has given both our organization and our communities. 500 graduates is an extraordinary milestone, but we hope it is only the beginning for our partnership. As we look to 2026 and beyond, support for this program will ensure that more women have access to this life-changing course, and more families and children in rural Guatemala will benefit from confident, loving, resilient parents.
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