Katy Perry & Orlando Bloom Design Life Around Co-Parenting After Split

Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom are navigating their split by designing their lives around co-parenting their five-year-old daughter, Daisy Dove. A source confirms their commitment to putting their daughter first and maintaining an amicable family dynamic. The former couple was recently seen together in London, enjoying a family outing. Their representatives have stated that raising their daughter with love and mutual respect remains their shared priority.

Key Points: Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom Focus on Co-Parenting After Split

  • Amicable split focused on daughter
  • Designing life around co-parenting
  • Seen together as a family in London
  • Mutual respect remains a priority
2 min read

Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom designing life around co-parenting after split

Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom are committed to co-parenting daughter Daisy Dove, putting family first after ending their engagement.

Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom designing life around co-parenting after split
"They're both super committed to keeping this family dynamic - Source to People"

Los Angeles, Jan 1

Singer-songwriter Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom, who called off their engagement, are working towards co-parenting as they navigate their latest roles.

After the actor, 48, and the singer, 41, were pictured taking daughter Daisy Dove on an outing together in London earlier this week, a source said that they're "always gonna be family and put their daughter first", reports 'People' magazine.

"They're both super committed to keeping this family dynamic", the source said, adding that it's "all amicable and pretty easy".

As per 'People' magazine, the source also noted that their "busy careers" with a lot of traveling involved "takes another kind of commitment".

Still, the two are "doing a great job at figuring it all out" for their 5-year-old little girl. Perry and Bloom had ended their engagement after nine years together, with reps for the pair officially confirming the couple's split shortly after.

"Due to the abundance of recent interest and conversation surrounding Orlando Bloom and Katy Perry's relationship, representatives have confirmed that Orlando and Katy have been shifting their relationship over the past many months to focus on co-parenting", the July 3 statement read. "They will continue to be seen together as a family, as their shared priority is, and always will be, raising their daughter with love, stability, and mutual respect".

After news of her split from the actor went public, a separate source said that the singer was focused on creating a positive co-parenting environment for her daughter.

"Katy has every intention of maintaining a positive and respectful relationship with Orlando", the source said. "He's the father of their daughter and that will always come first for her. They've been through a lot together and while they've decided to go their separate ways, there's still a mutual respect between them. They're still very much in touch and coparenting Daisy together. For the sake of their daughter, they're committed to keeping things amicable".

The former couple was seen enjoying Paddington: The Musical in London with their daughter.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Co-parenting with busy schedules and international travel is no joke. Respect to them for making it work. Many Indian parents in metro cities face similar challenges with work travel. The key is the commitment they mentioned.
A
Aman W
Good for them. But let's be honest, it's easier when you have nannies, private jets, and massive wealth. For the average Indian parent going through a separation, managing schedules and emotions while dealing with societal pressure is a whole different battle.
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Sarah B
Taking your child to a musical together post-split? That's genuinely sweet. It shows the child that her parents' love for her is unchanged. More people should learn from this 'putting the child first' mentality.
K
Karthik V
"Always gonna be family" – that's a powerful statement. In our culture, family bonds are everything, even if the marital relationship changes. Hope they can maintain this amicable dynamic long-term for their daughter's sake.
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Nisha Z
Mutual respect is the foundation. So many Indian couples could benefit from this approach instead of bitter court battles that only hurt the children involved. Wishing them the best.

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