The quiet ripple effect of supporting single mothers and why it matters more than we realise.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Tenille didn’t come into the Sociii Innerwork Program looking for a transformation. She came in exhausted, carrying the weight of single motherhood, a mind full of self-doubt, and a history she hadn’t quite figured out how to put down.
She’s not alone in that. In Australia, there are 1.1 million single parent families. Eight in ten of those are headed by a mother. And nearly half sit in the lower income bracket, with a third spending 30% or more of what they earn just on keeping a roof over their family’s head.
The numbers tell part of the story. But Tenille’s story tells the rest.
The shift for her didn’t happen overnight. It started with something she hadn’t expected: looking inward. Through the Sociii program, she began doing what her coaches call ‘inner child work’: sitting with the parts of her past that had shaped the way she saw herself, the way she reacted, the way she moved through the world.
What came out of that work was a realisation that she had the power to let go. That the past didn’t have to keep running her life. That she could choose a different response, a different story, a different future.
“I know now that I’ve got this,” she says. “I’m not having breakdowns all the time. I don’t hate myself anymore. I know I’m strong.”
Those aren’t small words. For someone who has been told, by circumstances, by life, sometimes by the people around her, that she isn’t enough, they’re enormous.
And here’s what Tenille also knows now: when she changes, her kids feel it.
That’s the ripple effect. It’s the thing that doesn’t always make it into conversations about supporting single mothers, but it might be the most important part of all.
When a mother finds more self-control, her children feel safer. When she finds focus, the household steadies. When she finds positivity, her kids grow up inside it. The work she does on herself doesn’t stay with her. It reaches forward into the next generation.
Sociii Is A not-for-profit organisation
This is exactly what Sociii was built around. The not-for-profit organisation runs its Innerwork Program, a six-month journey combining one-on-one life coaching, group sessions, and community support, completely free of charge for participants. The program works with single mothers to unpack limiting beliefs, process past trauma, and build the kind of emotional clarity and resilience that creates real, lasting change.
It’s not about fixing anyone. It’s about giving women the tools and the space to do the work they’re already ready to do.
Tenille is proof of what that looks like. Since completing the program, she describes her day-to-day life in three words: greater self-control, greater focus, greater positivity. Not abstract concepts, but real, felt differences in how she parents, how she handles hard days, how she shows up.
When you support a single mother, you’re not just supporting one person. You’re changing the environment her children grow up in. You’re shifting what they learn to expect from themselves and from the world. You’re interrupting a cycle that, without intervention, tends to repeat.
That’s not a small thing. That’s everything.
The Sociii Innerwork Program is currently open for applications. Single mothers across Australia can apply at sociii.life. The program is free of charge, and one of Sociii’s coaches will be in touch within a few business days.