JODI Sta. Maria shares personal journey toward a working blended family. Photo from KC After Hours .
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Jodi Sta. Maria on choosing peace

Jefferson Fernando

For Jodi Sta. Maria, the idea of a blended family was never simple—and never instant. Speaking candidly on KC After Hours, the actress shared a journey shaped by conflict, humility, and a conscious decision to let go.

“I’m speaking of my journey, our journey, as a blended family that worked for us,” Sta. Maria said. “But it didn’t happen overnight. It was hard.”

She did not sugarcoat the reality of those early years.

“There were lawsuits left and right,” she recalled. “We were so hostile that you really couldn’t put us in the same room.”

Sta. Maria was referring to the period following the end of her marriage to Pampi Lacson, who later built a family with actress Iwa Moto. Sta. Maria and Lacson share a son, and while their current co-parenting setup is often cited as admirable, she said reaching that point required deep personal reckoning.

Looking back, Sta. Maria shared a moment that became a turning point, unfolding in the early hours of the morning.

“One night, around three in the morning, I was drinking when a friend called me,” she said. “I told her, ‘I’m fine. Tomorrow, this and that will happen.’ But deep inside, I was asking, ‘Why does it feel like I’m the one suffering when I feel like I’m the one who was wronged?’”

That same friend offered words Sta. Maria initially resisted.

“She told me, ‘The Lord opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble,’” Sta. Maria said. “And I reacted, ‘What? You don’t get it. You don’t understand.’”

Despite her frustration, the message lingered.

“It kept echoing in my mind,” she said. “Eventually, I realized something had to change—starting with me.”

That realization led to a decision she never expected to make.

“I decided to stop filing cases,” Sta. Maria said. “Then I messaged him. I’m sure he was surprised. I said, ‘Can we meet at this place, at this time? Let’s talk.’ That’s where it started.”

From that conversation emerged a new dynamic rooted in cooperation and shared responsibility. Sta. Maria now describes their situation as a “happily blended family,” while stressing that the process was far from easy.

“I don’t disregard people who say blended families are difficult,” she said. “Because they are. I know that firsthand.”

For Sta. Maria, the lesson was not about erasing pain, but about choosing humility over pride, dialogue over conflict, and peace over prolonged anger—decisions that reshaped both her family dynamic and her own healing.