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Parents Who Have Successfully
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Fear takes over
reason, incomplete facts become evidence, and court calendars become
jammed with repeat visits to a judge to try to bring sanity to what is
unlikely to ever be sane. On top of this, social movements are promoting
one side over another in their clamor for justice. Politicians are lobbied
to pass laws to bring order to chaos. Gender wars are fueled and lives are
destroyed. My exposure to
custody wars came from the mothers and fathers attending my Breakthrough
Parenting® classes at The Parent Connection, Inc., an agency
that I founded in Los Angeles in 1983.
Many of the parents
in my classes were litigating over child custody. Most said that they
wanted to settle the case, but none of them would settle by giving up all
access to their child, which seemed to be the only other alternative open
to them.
It was disturbing to
see that in many of these cases, the child was behaving outrageously, to
the point of cursing one of their parents, and kicking, spitting, and
calling them stupid, mean and horrible. What can
you do when one parent is intractable and vitriolic? What can you do when
the child becomes caught up in the fight and starts taking sides? I came
to realize that this level of conflict in custody disputes was a fallout
from sweeping societal changes.
A shift then began,
and fathers became more involved in the day-to-day care of their children
than was true in previous generations.
As rigidity about
parental roles began to fall away, the tender years doctrine was
still in place. This doctrine presumed that by virtue of the fact that a
woman was the mother of a child, that she must be the superior parent. In
the early 1970's several states passed "no-fault" divorce laws, where
anyone who wanted out of a marriage was free to leave. Some have called it
the "no guilt laws." There was a proliferation of divorce that was
historically unprecedented.
After a family
breakup, many fathers wanted to continue to be involved with the care of
their children. Suddenly, they found that they had no legal right to have
custody of their children unless the mother agreed to it.
Due to the lobbying efforts of James Cook,
founder of the Joint Custody Association, who was caught up in this
problem himself, the California legislature successfully passed the first
joint custody laws.
Joint custody was widely seen as a better way
of handling the evolving problem of how to share child custody. It was
believed that it would lead to fewer fights over the custody of children
because it was more equal. Other states also passed joint custody laws.
These laws helped to level the playing field for fathers.
The majority of
mothers and fathers welcomed joint custody. Others did not. As with any
trend, there was a backlash. Child custody became a highly political
gender-specific issue. Thus, the ramping up of high-level disputes also
began in the 70's.
In most states
the tender years presumption (mother knows best) was replaced with the
best-interests-of-the-child presumption of joint custody (the best parent
is both parents).
In the 1980's,
courts began to increasingly ignore gender in determining child custody.
This removed the automatic allocation of full custody rights to the
mother, so she had less time with the children. Instead, the courts looked
first at how the custody could be shared, and if that wasn't possible,
judicial officers attempted to determine which parent was more interested
and better able to attend to the best interest of the child.
Fathers
perceived that they were at a disadvantage because of a bias toward the
mother having custody. Because of this, in the 1980's more fathers than
ever started showing up at parenting classes to make sure that their
skills were state of the art. This is when these issues were first called
to my attention.
Most parents
were able to share custody of their children, and they worked out
childcare issues in an amicable way.
A large number
of women were even relieved to have fathers share in the childcare, which
enabled them to pursue their personal life goals involving their education
and career.
However, when
there was not a friendly resolution to custody, fathers found themselves
with a greater opportunity to gain joint or primary custodial status by
litigating (going to court). The stakes got even higher when the legal
system was used to resolve these difficult problems. In extreme cases, the
alienation of a child's affection against a targeted parent became a
bizarre escalation of the intensity of the conflict.
However, the disorder wasn't just brainwashing
or programming by a parent. It was confounded by what Dr. Gardner calls
self-created contributions by the child in support of the alienating
parent's campaign of denigration against the targeted parent. He called
this disorder Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS), a new term that includes
the contribution to the problem made by both the parent and the child.
2. Its primary manifestation is the child's
campaign of denigration against a parent, a campaign that has no
justification.
3. It results from the combination of a
programming (brainwashing) of a parent's indoctrinations and the child's
own contributions to the vilification of the targeted parent. The child denigrates the alienated parent
with foul language and severe oppositional behavior. The child offers weak, absurd, or frivolous
reasons for his or her anger. The child is sure of him or herself and
doesn't demonstrate ambivalence, i.e. love and hate for the alienated
parent, only hate. The child exhorts that he or she alone came
up with ideas of denigration. The "independent-thinker" phenomenon is
where the child asserts that no one told him to do this. The child supports and feels a need to
protect the alienating parent. The child does not demonstrate guilt over
cruelty towards the alienated parent. The child uses borrowed scenarios, or
vividly describes situations that he or she could not have experienced.
Animosity is spread to the friends and/or
extended family of the alienated parent. In severe cases of parent alienation, the
child is utterly brain- washed against the alienated parent. The alienator
can truthfully say that the child doesn't want to spend any time with this
parent, even though he or she has told him that he has to, it is a court
order, etc. The alienator typically responds, "There isn't anything that I
can do about it. I'm not telling him that he can't see you." PAS is an escalation of Parental Alienation
(PA) The mild category he calls the naïve
alienators. They are ignorant of what they are doing and are willing to be
educated and change. The moderate category is the active
alienators. When they are triggered, they lose control of appropriate
boundaries. They go ballistic. When they calm down, they don't want to
admit that they were out of control. In the severe category are the obsessed
alienators or those who are involved in PAS. They operate from a
delusional system where every cell of their body is committed to
destroying the other parent's relationship with the child. In the latter case, he notes that we don't
have an effective protocol for treating an obsessed alienator other than
removing the child from their influence. An important point is that in PAS there is no
true parental abuse and/or neglect on the part of the alienated parent. If
this were the case, the child's animosity would be justified. Also, it is
not PAS if the child still has a positive relationship with the parent,
even though one parent is attempting to alienate the child from him or
her. Which gender is most likely to initiate
PAS? In order for a
campaign of alienation to occur, one parent needs to have considerable
time with the child. However, in recent years increasing numbers of
fathers have started instigating PAS, since there are few legal sanctions
for doing so. I've seen several dramatic cases where the
father was the alienator. In one case, the
father had no control over his obsession to trash the mother. Numerous
professionals told him, including the mother, that he could have shared
custody if he would be willing to follow the rules. He didn't have the
self-control to do this. When he lost custody
because of his aberrant behavior, he became a celebrity in the father's
rights movement and took his campaign into national circles. No one would
know from hearing him speak about his situation that there was serious
pathology going on (PAS) or how hard the professionals worked to stabilize
it. I've met divorcing
women who had been prevented from learning how to make a living to support
themselves. At the time of separation all access to financial resources
were stopped and the children removed from her care. These women reported
severe alienation of affection. It makes one grateful
to have laws that protect human rights and enforce a better way of
resolving conflict than a winner-take all approach. How common is PA and
PAS? She might
say: "Call me as soon as you get there to let me
know you are okay." Usually this
level of alienation dies down after the separating parents get used to
changes brought on by the separation and move on with their
lives. However, in rare cases, the anxiety not only
doesn't calm down, it escalates. PAS parents are psychologically fragile.
When things are going their way, they can hold themselves together. When
they are threatened however, they can become fiercely entrenched in
preserving what they see is rightfully theirs. Fortunately only a small percentage end up in
this level of conflict. Why do PAS parents act like they
do? To them, having total control over their child
is a life and death matter. Because they don't understand how to please
other people, any effort to do so always has strings attached. They don't
give; they only know how to take. They don't play by the rules and are not
likely to obey a court order. Descriptions
that are commonly used to describe severe cases of PAS are that the
alienating parent is unable to "individuate" (a psychological term used
when the person is unable to see the child as a separate human being from
him or herself). They are often described as being "overly involved with
the child" or "enmeshed". The parent may
be diagnosed as narcissistic (self-centered), where they presume that they
have a special entitlement to whatever they want. They think that there
are rules in life, but only for other people, not for them. Also, they may be
called a sociopath, which means a person who has no moral conscience.
These are people who are unable to have empathy or compassion for others.
They are unable to see a situation from another person's point of view,
especially their child's point of view. They don't distinguish between
telling the truth and lying in the way that others do. In spite of
admonitions from judges and mental health professionals to stop their
alienation, they can't. The prognosis for severely alienating parents is
very poor. It is unlikely that they are able to "get it." It is also
unlikely that they will ever stop trying to perpetuate the alienation.
This is a gut wrenching survival issue to them. How does the child get involved in PAS?
At birth, children
are totally reliant on a parent, usually the mother, for having all of
their needs met. It is part of normal child development to be enmeshed
with their primary caregiver, and very young children do not have a
separate identity from this caregiver. One of the mother's
roles is to help the child develop as a separate person, therefore,
infancy and childhood become a series of tasks of learning how to become
independent. For example, learning to putting oneself back to sleep,
eating, toilet training and caring for one's hygiene. Instead of promoting this independence, the
alienating parent encourages continued dependence. The parent may insist
on sleeping with the child, feeding the child ("It's easier if I do it"),
and taking care of these rites of passage longer than normal child
development calls for. This "spoiling" may not feel right to the child,
but they do not have enough ego strength to do anything about it. A PAS mother
can't imagine that the father is capable of planning the child's time
while in his care. Therefore, she arranges several things for the child to
do while at the father's house. One of the most common ways of doing this
is to sign the child up for on-going lessons without permission from the
father. The parent may even decree
whom the child can and cannot see, particularly specific members of the
child's extended family on the father's side. The mother desperately wants
control over the time when the child isn't with her. One of the most unusual
situations that I ran into was the father who picked up his sons at 9:00
a.m. on a Saturday for the weekend. He discovered that his very excited
boys had their hearts set on going to Disneyland for the day, when this
idea had never crossed his mind. One theory
about why a mother will act this way is that when a father takes his share
of joint custody, it is like asking her to give away part of her body. One
mother said, "He is going to remove my right arm and take it for the
weekend." It feels like the mother has lost a profound part of who she is
as a person. She feels fractured, pulled apart. Why is PAS a double bind for the
child? Family
volitility The alienating
parent's hatred can have no bounds. The severest form will bring out every
horrible allegation known, including claims of domestic violence, stalking
and the sexual molestation of the child. Many fathers say that there have
been repeated calls to the Department of Family and Child Services
alleging child abuse and neglect. In most cases the
investigators report that they found nothing wrong. However, the
indoctrinating parent feels that these reports are not fabrications, but
very, very real. She can describe the horror of what happen in great
detail. Regardless of the actual truth, in her mind, it did
happen. Most of the alienated
fathers that I work with are continually befuddled by her lying. "How can
she lie like that?" They don't realize that these lies are not based on
rational thinking. They are incapable of understanding the difference
between what is true and what they want to be true. A vital part of
fighting PAS is to understand the severity of the psychological
disturbance that is the source of it. Intergenerational
patterns When a child is placed in the role of the
parent's therapist What happens to the child when you can't
stop PAS? Obviously,
without anyone to stop the alienation from progressing, the child will
become estranged from the alienated parent. The relationship with this
parent will eventually be severed. It is doubtful that, without
psychological intervention as the child grows, he or she will ever
understand what happened. The child's
primary role model will be the maladaptive, dysfunctional parent. He or
she will not have the benefit of growing up with the most well-adjusted
parent and all that this parent can contribute to enrich the child's life.
Many of these children come to experience serious psychiatric
problems. Will they ever grow up and
realize what happened to them? Without someone who can recognize the
syndrome and counsel them about it, it isn't likely that they will ever
figure it out. However, there have been exceptions where the child and the
alienated parent have been successfully reunified later in life. Therapists Our courts, social services
and mental health workers are all committed to stop child abuse and
neglect when they see it occurring. Unfortunately, in PAS situations a
dramatic and loud complaint from the alienating parent often ends up being
acted upon without an investigation as to the accuracy of the allegation.
This frequently removes the alienated parent from the children and allows
the alienating parent considerable additional time to proceed with the
alienation. By the time all of the
evaluations are in place and the case is heard by the court, considerable
damage has been done to the child. It is an irony that the very people we
turn to for help in such a difficult situation can often be those who most
contribute to allowing the on-going abuse and neglect of the child to
continue. What can be done about the problem?
First, it takes a
sophisticated mental health professional to be able to identify that PAS
is occurring. Most forensic evaluators such as psychiatrists and clinical
psychologists have studied the disorder and are able to recognize it. Forensic evaluators
diagnose PAS by having the parents take a battery of psychological tests,
doing a detailed case history and by observation. They make
recommendations as to what to do. After the evaluator has written a report
on the family and made recommendations, nothing will happen to resolve the
crisis without court intervention. The alienated parent has to take
the report to a judge who must then be convinced that the child is being
alienated and that it is not in their best interest to stay in such an
environment. It is rare however that judges
have any degree of mental health training. They most often learn about PAS
from the bench. It usually takes several trips to court to point out how
badly a child is being treated before a judge is willing to act. How are PAS cases resolved
legally? This is further evidence
that the judge doesn't understand the magnitude of the problem. The judge
in one of the most severe PAS cases I worked on was from the old school.
He was tired of having the litigants continue to appear before him. One
day he said, "Why don't the two of you go out in the hallway and kiss and
make up." This is an example of how frustrating these cases are for
judges. Indeed, these are the hardest cases to decide. Judges have
been slow to place serious sanctions on the alienating parent. If there is
no threat of severe fines, jail time or sole custody to the targeted
parent, the chances are remote that the out-of-control parent can be
stopped. It usually
takes a dramatic situation where court orders are broken to force the
court to change primary custody. Often it is only a matter of time before
alienating parents become desperate and their unstable mental health gets
the better of them. People in an official position start to recognize the
alienating parent as being out of line, and become supportive of the
targeted parent. In one case, the 9 and 4
year old daughters were abducted and presumed to be on their way to
Australia through an underground group that hides women who are victims of
domestic violence, often of a sexual nature and where the father is
stalking. The girls were missing for 3 months and found in another county
where they were waiting for final arrangements to be made before their
departure. When the police broke into the house at 3:00 a.m., they found
the girls sleeping with their mother. They had been given boy's names,
clothes, haircuts and their hair was dyed. They were not allowed contact
with anyone outside of their hiding place, not even to go to school. The
oldest child had strep throat and the youngest was seriously withdrawn.
In another
case, the mother could no longer convince the social workers, the police
or the Court about her allegations. She was known to be unstable because
she had "cried wolf" too many times. She abducted her daughter to Utah.
She told officials there that the courts where she lived were protecting a
proven child molester. The press was called. After she was interviewed;
there was a virtual feeding frenzy as the father's photograph and the
story was on all the local news networks. A big part of the problem was that the seven
year old girl, said "Yes" when asked if her father had molested her. Even
though this had already been disproved by forensic evaluators, she was
still confused. Can the alienation of children be
reversed? In the former case, where
the mother was kidnapping the children, she now sees them two hours a
month at the Department of Children's Services with a social worker
present to monitor everything that she says and does. The girls have also
been in extensive therapy and are doing well. Since this is among the
most severe kinds of abuse of a child's emotions, there will be scars and
lost opportunities for normal development. The child is at risk of growing
up and being an alienator also, since the alienating parent has been the
primary role model. What is the best way to deal with PAS?
They completed a comprehensive parenting course such as
Breakthrough Parenting, and stuck with it until they rated excellent in
the knowledge, skills and methods taught. Their parenting skills became
superior. They were even-tempered, logical and kept their emotions under
control. They never retaliated. A person who reacts in anger is
proving the alienator's point that he or she is unstable. They certainly thought of giving up but
never did. No matter how awful the harassment got, they worried about
leaving their daughter or son in that environment. They were driven to
continue trying to get the court to understand the seriousness of the
issues and to change primary custody to
them. They were willing and able to go to the
financial expense of seeing it through. They got help from a skilled family lawyer
who had experience with parent alienation syndrome. They became good at understanding how the
courts work and the law as it applied to their case. In many cases,
because of excessive expenses, parents even ended up as pro per (called
pro se in some states) where they were representing themselves without a
lawyer. They had a case where a forensic evaluator
made a strong statement about the alienation and recommend changing
legal and primary custody to the alienated parent. Some parents had to
go back to the evaluator to demonstrate that his or her earlier
recommendations were not working. They persevered in demonstrating that
they were rational, reasonable, and had the best interest of the child
at heart. They provided the court with an appropriate
parenting plan that showed how the child would be well taken care of in
their care. They understood the nature of the problem
and focused on what to do about it, even though they and their children
were being victimized. (Alienated parents who got caught up in "how
terrible it all is" and spent time judging the situation, went under
emotionally.) They didn't live a victim's life. They were proactive in seeking constructive
action. They avoided adding to the problem. One
father expressed it like this: "I don't know how to make it better with
the mother, but I do know how to make it worse." He was one of the most
successful parents I met in fighting the PAS problem because he stayed
in the role of the peacekeeper. They kept a diary or journal of key events,
describing what happened and when. They documented the alienation with evidence
that was admissible in court. They always called or showed up to pick up
their children, even if they knew that the children won't be there. This
was often very painful, but then they could document that they tried,
when the alienator alleged that this parent had no interest in the
child. They focused on enjoying their children's
company and never talked to their children about their case. They always
took the high road and never talked badly about the other parent to
their children. They absolutely never showed a child any court orders or
other sensitive documents. They didn't let the children overhear
inappropriate conversations on the telephone. They didn't violate court orders. They paid
their child support on time and proved that they could live within the
letter of the law. They were truly decent, principled people. It was obvious that they loved their children. Conclusion Once the syndrome is discovered, it is even harder for the professionals to figure out what to do about it. It is important for alienated parents to be supported by compassionate people while going through this difficult time. PAS is never easy, but there is plenty of hope for those who take the high road and follow what worked for other PAS parents as shown above. I have developed materials that have helped many parents going through PAS, for information click here. Jayne Major, Ph.D. © 2002-2004 Breakthrough Parenting, Inc. |
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