Greg Stephens has built his career helping people work through the troubled waters of failed relationships. Over a span of thirty months, he repaired 36 business and personal relationships. From resolving conflicts with coworkers and bad bosses to successfully managing divorce, he has mended them all.
You’ll benefit
Increased Emotional IntelligenceBetter Relationships at Work and HomeSelf-MasteryKnowing How to Manage Emotions (Yours and Theirs)Creating Psychological SafetyImproved Ability to UnderstandAnd much more
The practical strategies you’ll learn will help restore the broken bond between you and the lost friend, family member, client, or business associate.
Are you ready to move forward?
You’ll love this inspirational conflict management book because life is better when we can heal from past wounds and move forward, effectively leaving our past in the past.
A Practical and Hopeful Guide to Repairing Broken Relationships
In Build New Bridges: The Art of Restoring Impossible Relationships, Greg Stephens offers a grounded, compassionate, and practical approach to navigating conversations most people avoid altogether.
The book opens with a powerful personal story about an “impossible” conversation Greg had with his father—an honest and human entry point that immediately establishes trust. From there, he draws on extensive real-world experience repairing both personal and professional relationships, showing what’s actually possible when emotional intelligence, self-mastery, and psychological safety are applied with care.
What makes this book especially valuable is how it expands your thinking without pressure or judgment. It gently invites you to reconsider relationships you may have assumed were beyond repair and equips you with practical strategies for managing emotions—your own and others’—while fostering understanding and clarity.
This is an encouraging and genuinely useful book for anyone navigating conflict at work or at home, or for those seeking healing, closure, or a constructive way forward. It’s a reminder that even when relationships feel broken, meaningful repair is sometimes closer than we think.