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Over a decade after their high-profile divorce, Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale are back in the headlines following a March 2026 interview where Rossdale gave viewers a glimpse into how the former couple handles raising their three children, Kingston, 19, Zuma, 17, and Apollo, 12, in the wake of their messy split.
Stefani and Rossdale’s divorce, announced in 2015 after 13 years of marriage, was mired in explosive allegations that Rossdale had conducted a long-term affair with the couple’s nanny. Stefani has described the divorce as “months of torture” and shared that, “When my family fell apart, it was a catastrophe.”
In his recent Fox News Digital interview, Rossdale speaks to how the couple co-parents their three children, admitting, "It’s a two-lane highway, you know, but they don't ever seem to merge, which is fine." His frank statements resonated with countless divorced parents.
To unpack the parallel parenting paths of Stefani and Rossdale, I sat down with family and childcare expert and author of The Nanny Connie Way, Connie Simpson ('Nanny Connie'), who has spent more than 40 years inside some of the most high-profile households in the world helping parents build calm, confident, well-structured homes.
Like me, Nanny Connie was unsurprised to hear Rossdale’s take on co-parenting with Stefani more than a decade later.
“When I hear a parent say that co-parenting feels like a two-lane highway that never intersects— I believe them. That is not bitterness. That is not an exaggeration,” she says. “I have sat across from parents who feel it deeply — two people who used to share a life, now living in two completely separate worlds. And sadly, this has truly become the norm. It is accepted.”
Celebrity childcare expert Connie Simpson ('Nanny Connie') warns that when divorced parents remain stuck in their own hurt, children bear the burden of conflicts that were never theirs to carry.
Photo credit: Ladd Love Visuals
Without resolution, conflict can keep parents entangled in ongoing and often messy legal and emotional battles, underscoring the importance of establishing a clear parenting plan, consistent communication, and firm boundaries early in a separation. Failure to do so can weigh heavily on the children, as Nanny Connie has seen play out time and time again.
“The breakdown happens when parents try to stay in their own lane and parent from their own place of hurt,” Nanny Connie explains. “You cannot parent from trauma in order to correct your trauma. These are different human beings. Your child is not your past.”
She also notes, “At some point, you have to remove the blinders. You have to stop focusing on what did not work between you and the other parent and start focusing on what will work for your child. This is not tit-for-tat. This is not back-and-forth. Those are playground behaviors, and we have already taught our children to move beyond that.”
Stefani and Rossdale initially came to a 50-50 joint custody agreement, with reports suggesting that physical custody alternated on a week-by-week basis. Physical custody is just one part of the whole picture, but how parents communicate and maintain routines is what ultimately shapes stability in the lives of their children.
While Stefani and Rossdale settled on a 50-50 custody split, differing values and parenting styles can quickly turn post-divorce parenting arrangements into battlegrounds that destabilize a child's sense of consistency.
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Legal custody arrangements, which determine the decision-making authority over matters such as education, extracurricular activities, religion, and medical care, can be especially contentious when parents have differing values. Rossdale’s statement could be hinting at opposing parenting styles, including Stefani’s emphasis on a Christian upbringing—an issue that brought the family to mediation back in 2018.
The role of family courts is to prioritize the welfare of the child above all else. When possible, joint legal custody allows both parents to collaborate on major decisions. However, problems can arise when differences in beliefs lead to deliberate delays or obstruction of sensitive decisions. In such cases, many families will turn to a third party, such as a parenting coordinator, who works with the family long-term as a neutral sounding board for resolution and to prevent repeated court involvement. In higher-conflict situations, third parties may help parents with “parallel parenting,” in which parents maintain independent rules in their respective homes, with limited interaction between parents.
From Nanny Connie’s experience, a “my way or the highway” mentality can have a negative impact on children. “A child does not survive and thrive on a one-lane highway,” she stresses. “They did not ask for that. They need consistency. They need communication. They need to feel like both parents are connected in some way, even if the relationship is no longer there.”
Aside from creating inconsistency and instability, this approach can also create legal strife on important issues such as medical care. While the courts want to give both parents the opportunity to be involved in their children’s lives, in certain cases, granting one parent sole legal custody may be in the best interest of the child to ensure their well-being is not caught in the middle of years of ongoing parental disputes.
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