Windley Works

Windley Works Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Windley Works, 50744 25th Street, Mattawan, MI.

Coach Jen is an Executive & Life Coach ● Mindset Coaching for Professional & Personal Confidence, Improving Relationships, Growing Intuition, Emotional Intelligence, Sales & Business Trainings, etc. ● Employee Enrichment Workshops ● Vision Boards

A Pizza Party Vision Board Party! 🍕*Reach out to learn more about creating your own Vision Board Event.  Plenty of dates...
01/17/2026

A Pizza Party Vision Board Party! 🍕

*Reach out to learn more about creating your own Vision Board Event. Plenty of dates open!!

Emotional Scale Cards are back in stock!!  I know everyone loves their cards.  Digital World my bum!  🍑
01/14/2026

Emotional Scale Cards are back in stock!! I know everyone loves their cards. Digital World my bum! 🍑

12/24/2025
Start 2026 with intention & inspiration. Join Windley Works & Coach Jen for three transformational experiences designed ...
12/17/2025

Start 2026 with intention & inspiration. Join Windley Works & Coach Jen for three transformational experiences designed to help you close 2025 well and step into 2026 with clarity.

Offerings:

SACRED PAUSE — $35
A guided journaling experience to honor the closing of 2025 and the opening of 2026. Includes prompts, spiritual connections, meditation, and musical inspiration.

THE ANNUAL ENERGY ALMANAC — $26
Gain clarity on the energetic themes of 2026. Numerology, astrology, cultural comparisons, and key dates/insights.

VISION BOARDS — $25 per board
A creative session to design a visual map for 2026. All supplies included; optional catering; short presentation on the neurology of visioning; coaching and support during the 2-hour experience.

Join one — or experience all three. Step into 2026 with clarity, creativity & confidence.

More info & registration: www.windleyworks.com

✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️ So true! ✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️The next couple of weeks are excellent for coaching.  Work goes on hold and those who st...
12/12/2025

✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️ So true! ✨️✨️✨️✨️✨️
✨️The next couple of weeks are excellent for coaching. Work goes on hold and those who strive for BIG success know that this is the best time to get organized, strategized, and RENEWED! 🏃‍♂️🏃‍♀️💥

Nothing like a coaching session to help release you from the weight of your procrastination, ego, bad habits, etc.  😁
12/03/2025

Nothing like a coaching session to help release you from the weight of your procrastination, ego, bad habits, etc. 😁

It’s Vision Board Season—Let’s Go!Book your session now whether you’re:🎉 Jumping into New Year goals early👯 Gathering fr...
11/24/2025

It’s Vision Board Season—Let’s Go!
Book your session now whether you’re:
🎉 Jumping into New Year goals early
👯 Gathering friends or family for a meaningful holiday celebration
💼 A business ready to ditch the stale office party and ignite team excitement, clarity, and collaboration

I say this so often .. "parenting" adult children is one of the most difficult jobs on the planet and we really should t...
10/21/2025

I say this so often .. "parenting" adult children is one of the most difficult jobs on the planet and we really should talk about it more... 🙏🫶

It's a particular kind of heartbreak parenting adult children. You watch the child you once held, guided, and protected choose a path you wouldn’t. Maybe it’s reckless, maybe just different—but your hands ache to reach out, to stop the fall you see coming. Yet you can’t. Not anymore. They want freedom, even if it costs them.

The love doesn’t fade; it deepens, even aches. You’re no longer the authority, but still the one who’d take their pain without hesitation. And so comes the hardest balance—how to love fiercely without holding tightly, how to care deeply without taking control.

Sometimes our protection wounds. Advice sounds like criticism. Help feels like mistrust. Other times, afraid to interfere, we grow silent when presence was needed most. The line between support and smothering is impossibly thin.

This is the ache Jim Burns understands. In Doing Life with Your Adult Children: Keep Your Mouth Shut and the Welcome Mat Out, he writes not as an expert, but as a parent who’s lived it. With decades of guiding families, Burns offers not clichés but clarity: parenting changes—it doesn’t end. The healthiest bonds grow from respect, trust, and steady love. He shows how to stay close without crowding, to offer wisdom without wounding, and to remain a safe place, no matter the storm.

Here are six truths that might change everything:
1. Your role has shifted—grieve it, then embrace it.
The hardest pill to swallow: You are no longer in charge. Parenting at 18 isn't parenting at 8. You've gone from director to consultant, from authority to ally. Your opinion matters only when they ask for it. Your guidance only lands when it's wrapped in humility, not certainty. Parents who cling to control find themselves on the outside looking in. Parents who honor the shift find something better: a relationship between equals, built on mutual respect rather than hierarchy. It requires death—the death of who you were to them—but what rises in its place is worth the loss.

2. Silence is not abandonment; it's trust.
The book's subtitle is its beating heart: Keep your mouth shut. Bite your tongue more than feels natural. Resist the reflex to comment, correct, or critique. Your adult children don't need your real-time analysis of their job, their partner, their parenting, their choices. What feels like care to you often feels like control to them. Unsolicited advice, no matter how loving, is usually received as judgment. Burns doesn't say stay silent because you don't care—he says stay silent because you do. Silence, paired with presence, says: "I trust you. I'm here if you need me. But this is yours to figure out." That message, more than any advice, is what keeps them coming back.

3. The welcome mat must never be pulled in.
This is non-negotiable. No matter the disappointment. No matter the disagreement. No matter how far they've strayed from what you hoped for them. Your door stays open. Your heart stays soft. They need to know—deep in their bones—that your love isn't conditional on their performance, their choices, or their conformity to your expectations. The welcome mat is a symbol, yes, but it's also a sacred promise: "You belong here. Always. Not because of what you do, but because of who you are. My child. Forever." When everything else in their world feels uncertain, your acceptance cannot be.

4. Help without crippling; give without enabling.
Money complicates everything. Many parents wrestle with the question: When do I help, and when do I let them face the consequences? Burns's answer is wise and nuanced: Be generous, but not foolish. Help in a crisis. Don't fund irresponsibility. There's a difference between a safety net and a hammock. Helping once communicates love. Helping repeatedly for the same self-inflicted problem communicates something else: "I don't think you're capable." Healthy boundaries aren't selfish—they're an act of respect. They say, "I believe you can do hard things."

5. Love them through the differences—even the ones that scare you.
Your adult children may not vote the way you vote. They may not worship the way you worship. They may not love the way you think they should love. Their values may feel like a rejection of everything you tried to instill. This is where many parents lose their children—not through silence, but through the desperate attempt to argue them back. Burns urges a different path: Listen. Ask questions. Be curious instead of combative. Accept that influence isn't the same as agreement. Trying to control their beliefs will only close the door between you. But staying present, even in the discomfort of difference, keeps the relationship alive. And an open relationship is your only hope of any real influence at all.

6. Trust is the only foundation left.
In the end, everything rests on trust. Not naïve trust that they'll never fail—they will. But trust that you did your best. Trust that they are capable of learning, growing, stumbling, and rising again. Trust that love, not control, is what holds a relationship together when everything else falls apart. You are no longer raising them. That work is done. Now, you are walking beside them—two adults, trying to figure out life, each with your own scars and your own wisdom. The question is no longer "How do I shape them?" It's "How do I love them well?" And the answer is simpler than you think: Show up. Stay open. Let go.

Parenting adult children is an exercise in powerlessness. You have influence but no control. You have history but no authority. You have love—so much love it could drown you—but love alone doesn't determine outcomes. What it does determine is whether you'll still be standing there when they need you. Whether the door will be open when they finally turn around. Whether home will still feel like home.
That's the work now. Not shaping them, but staying steady. Not fixing them, but being findable. Not controlling the story, but remaining a character they want in it.
And maybe, just maybe, that's enough.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/3KOUuAj
Enjoy the audiobook with a membership trial using the same link.

Address

50744 25th Street
Mattawan, MI
49071

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Windley Works posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Windley Works:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram

Windley Works is Coaching & Marketing that Works

Why hire outside marketing help? Your company is your blood, sweat, and tears and you are emotionally attached. An outside partner brings fresh eyes and new perspectives creating more business and even more profit.

Jennifer first learned that she was good at putting words together in Miss Duda’s 4th grade class. Cary is full of wit with perfectly timed quips. It was banter and humor that first brought them together as a couple.

Jennifer left her corporate commodity job in 2014 to pursue her long held dream of being an Executive and Life Coach. Her clients wanted her to also support them with all aspects of marketing. She often asked Cary for his creative help leading him to join her in Windley Works in 2017, expanding the company to include Web Design and Graphic Art.

In 2018 Cary’s father, Doug Hindley joined the team as an advisor bringing over 40 years of promotional products experience to Windley Works.