Sharna Burgess and son Zane (R), Brian Austin Green’s sons (L).Photo:Sharna Burgess/Instagram

Sharna Burgess/Instagram
Brian Austin GreenandSharna Burgesshad a funThanksgivingwith their family.
The pro dancer mom, 38, and herBeverly Hills, 90210alum fiancé, 50, spent the holiday enjoying quality time with sonZane Walker, 16 months, as well as Green’s sons with exMegan Fox—Journey River, 7,Bodhi Ransom, 9, and sonNoah Shannon, 11.
“So much of what I’ve manifested for my life is now my reality and I know the rest is coming. So, I sit today and everyday in gratitude for all I have, I sit in patience for that which is coming, and I sit in unconditional love in abundance for this life and this tribe of mine. Happy Thanksgiving everyone. To all 1M of you I’m grateful you’re here ✨♥️.”
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In addition to Zane, Green is also dad to son Kassius Lijah, 21, with exVanessa Marcil.
Burgess opened up about parenting with Green in anInstagram tributewritten in honor of hisbirthday in July.
“You are the kind of father I could’ve only dreamed of (and I did) for my children. You are the kind of partner to me that I thought only existed in my journal writings,” she wrote. “Life without you was pretty wonderful but life WITH you? It’s a dream.”
Brian Austin Green and Sharna Burgess with the kids.Brian Austin Green/Instagram

Brian Austin Green/Instagram
Speaking about co-parenting on a recent episode of theOldishpodcast, Green praised Fox, saying that along with his fianceé, the three “co-parent really well together.”
“When we need to, we communicate really well, we’re open to things. We don’t take things personally. It is my goal, and I think it’s her goal as well, that the kids are in as healthy an environment as they can be in,” he said.
“I’ve really come to the understanding and the realization within the last five years that I think people do a huge disservice in thinking they don’t want a separation or a divorce to affect their kids because it will. It will absolutely affect your kids. The part of it you have control over is how it affects your kids, whether it’s a positive experience and you co-parent with the other person well, or you make it as loving an experience as possible, or a very angry head-to-head, fighting constantly,” Green noted.
Instead of making kids feel “stuck in the middle,” the three have focused on the fact that “it always has to be about the kids.”
source: people.com