
Welcome to Our
Registration Page
Please choose your mentor
and your first payment package.
Please choose your mentor
and your first payment package.
Ken Rabow: Master Level Mentor
Ken Rabow:
Master Level Mentor
“I have spent over twenty years listening to parents describe their child. Smart. Creative. Fundamentally good. And completely stuck. In every single case, the young adult had something they were made for that no one had named yet. My job is naming it.”
Ken developed an original mentoring method for working with young adults facing failure to launch, anxiety, autism, and finding their success life.
Jason Munroe: Resident Mentor
Jason Munroe:
Resident Mentor
“When young adults shut down, patience and structure can open doors again. People come to me when school, life, or work aren’t working. My role is to bring steadiness, accountability, and a plan feels possible.”
Jason excels at helping young adults build executive functioning skills, improve communication, and develop the confidence to take consistent action toward their goals.
Saritte Atkin: 1st Degree Mentor
Saritte Atkin
1st Degree Mentor
Philip Rowland: Resident Mentor
Philip Rowland:
Resident Mentor
Getting Your Child Onboard with Mentoring
For many parents, convincing your child to try something new, especially after other promises have fallen flat, can be challenging.
We understand. That’s why I give parents a way to introduce mentoring that feels natural, honest, and pressure-free. Practice saying it out loud before you share it with your child:
“I just met with a life coach named Ken Rabow. He’s not a therapist. This isn’t talk therapy. His life coaching method helps you figure out what you want in life and how to get there through small, steady steps.”
“I’d like you to try it for an hour. If it feels right, you can keep going month to month. If not, we’ll look for something else together based on what you’ve learned.”
“Ken asked me not to tell you what you should or shouldn’t do anymore. If I have concerns, I’ll email him — and you’ll work together to find solutions, then come back to me with what you’ve decided.”
“What do you think?”
For many parents, convincing your child to try something new, especially after other promises have fallen flat, can be challenging.
We understand. That’s why I give parents a way to introduce mentoring that feels natural, honest, and pressure-free. Practice saying it out loud before you share it with your child:
“I just met with a life coach named Ken Rabow. He’s not a therapist. This isn’t talk therapy. His life coaching method helps you figure out what you want in life and how to get there through small, steady steps.”
“I’d like you to try it for an hour. If it feels right, you can keep going month to month. If not, we’ll look for something else together based on what you’ve learned.”
“Ken asked me not to tell you what you should or shouldn’t do anymore. If I have concerns, I’ll email him — and you’ll work together to find solutions, then come back to me with what you’ve decided.”
“What do you think?”




