Parental Alienation; the programming of a child by a parent to turn
the child against the other parent has three levels of alienation mild,
moderate, and severe. As the alienation increases the negative behavior
of the children towards the targeted parent also increases. The
percentage of children having access and parenting time (visitation)
with the alienated parent decreases.
In a case study of thirty
highly conflicted divorce and custody cases, submitted by the courts
involving fifty nine children was evaluated to determine the existence
of Parental Alienation Syndrome. This is when the child aligns with the
alienating parent, adopts their views, joins in the defaming of the
target parent and rejects that parent citing frivolous and irrational
reasoning. Countering Parental Alienation Syndrome will take the
knowledge of Parental Alienation and finesse.
This must be
confronted to increase the chances for the target parent in reuniting
and maintaining a meaningful relationship with their children. Janelle
Burrill compiled, analyzed and evaluated the data for one year
(2000-2001) from the cases that were submitted from a two year period
(1998-2000). In the study twenty two children were listed under the mild
alienation category, seventeen in the moderate category, and twenty in
the severe.
The children listed under the mild alienation
category show that eighty two percent of them expressed affection for
the targeted parent. None of them had any anger towards or denigrated
(disrespect and reject) the parent. Ninety five percent had
parenting-time with the target. With mild alienation there is some
cynicism of the target parent. This generally arises from a persons lack
of restraint in making negative remarks about the target. They tend to
react in this manner when they are hurt, angry, and feel personally
attacked. For example, when parents first separate mom is feeling
anxious and will implicitly convey to the children that their father is a
bad person suggesting that it is not safe to be with him. She may say
something to the effect of, "If you get scared or are not having fun
call me right away and I will come and get you and bring you home."
Dad
may say something like, "Remember to tell your mother that you want to
spend more time with me," Suggesting that their mom is trying to
separate them from each other. Generally, this behavior from the parents
is done so they can look like they are the better parent to be with and
that something is wrong with the other one.
In the scenario with
mom the children start to question if they are safe to be with their
father. With dad they can start to believe their mother is trying to
estrange them from their dad. Usually when you point out the alienation
to the alienating parent they feel ashamed that their behavior is
negatively affecting the children and that they did not have enough
self-control to refrain from distributing alienation.
Parents and
children in this category normally have a good relationship. The
parents who hands out the alienation usually are unaware they are doing
it. It is a behavior that has not been addressed so it can be corrected.
These parents are usually willing to modify their behavior to benefit
the children. The recognizable denigration traits in mild alienation are
sighing in disapproval, rolling the eyes in contempt, ignoring,
disrespect, snide or sarcastic remarks, and defaming the target parent.
To defuse the alienation explain to the children why people will make
those kinds of gestures and bad-mouth another person. Let them know it
comes from when they feel disrespected, rejected, hurt by a person, and
that they lack self-control and respond in undesirable ways to validate
themselves.
In the moderate alienation category the percentage of
children who had parenting-time with the target parent drops
significantly from ninety five percent down to sixty five percent. The
same percentage of children also expressed affection for the target
parent with fifty nine percent of them expressing anger towards the
target and joining in the denigration of that parent.
With
moderate alienation the alienating parents have difficulty keeping their
composer when thing do not go their way or feel threatened. Like the
belief their counterpart is trying to take the children away from them.
They will increase the alienation when their anxiety escalates in an
effort to keep what they perceive is rightfully theirs. When they lose
control they go ballistic disregarding appropriate boundaries, including
the fear their behavior produces in the children.
When, they
calm down the alienating parent has a hard time taking responsibility
for their actions. But, there is hope. Some of these parents in this
category can be persuaded to develop their self-control with anger
management, therapy, and parenting classes. These parents love their
children and want to be a good parent and be viewed as one. But rarely
will they volunteer to get help. They blame the other parent for their
problems and believe the other parent is the problem.
If they do
not modify their behavior then the only remedy is to get a court order
for therapy and treatment. With moderately alienated children are
hesitant to spend time with the target parent. They have some fear of
the target parent due to the alienating parents repeatedly defaming the
target in an effort to get the children to get to accept their views
about the target parent and to align with them.
To remedy this
level of alienation with the children there needs to be an environment
where they feel safe and comfortable with the target parent. A therapist
can arrange to provide for this. The parent then need to listen to the
children without being judgmental, empathize with their feeling,
acknowledge their concerns, and let them know the conflict is between
the parents and they do not have to choose either parents side. They
should not have to reject one parent to please the other parent. They
should be able to love both without having a loyalty conflict.
Bring
to the attention of the alienating parent the harmful effects the
alienation is having on the children because they are conflicted on how
to please both parents without displeasing either one of them. Moderate
alienation ascends from emotional charged events. The parent feels they
have been wronged and react destructively. Afterwards they are
embarrassed of their behavior and might be willing to work on not
involving the children to even the score for the wrong they believe was
done to them. If there is unsatisfactory improvement and willingness on
the part of the alienating parent in correcting their behavior, which is
often the case, the target will need to get a court order for family
counseling and treatment.
In the severe alienation category forty
five percent of the children expressed affection for the target parent,
ninety percent had anger towards the target, and sixty percent join in
the denigration of the parent. Only fifteen percent of the children had
any parenting-time with the target parent. With severe alienation there
are no-holds-barred attacks on the targets character and the alienator
is obsessed with destroying the relationship the children has with the
target parent to inflict emotional pain on the target. Because they have
deep-rooted distorted beliefs about the target parent and operate from a
delusional system of thinking they are hindered from listening to
reason.
There is no effective way for treating severe alienation.
To minimize the influence of the alienating parent and harm the
alienation causes the children is to reduce or remove them from the care
of the alienating parent which will take legal intervention. At this
level of alienation the children aligns with the alienating parent,
adopt their distorted views about the target, and join in the campaign
to severe the relationship they have with the target parent. This is
where Parental Alienation is transformed into Parental Alienation
Syndrome.
A couple of signs of severe alienation are the
childrens refusal to participate in parenting-time with the target
parent even if it is court order, an automatic alliance with the
alienating parent when conflict arises between the parents, and they
join in rejecting and defaming the target parent. They back up their
claims with weak, frivolous and illogical explanations, and insist that
their views are their own and are not influenced by the alienating
parent.
The way to counter severe alienation is to obtain a court
order for a parenting plan, therapy, and participation in treatment. It
is necessary to get the order so the therapist can work with the family
to resolve, reduce, or at the very least stymie the alienation. At this
level of alienation the alienating parent objective is to hurt the
target parent by any means including using the children.
The
children need to be shown that they have been exposed to the alienation,
participated in the denigration, and how it negatively affects the
relationship they have with the target parent. Once the cause of the
children's alienation from a parent is identified then an expert mental
health professional can provide an appropriate treatment plan to reunite
the parent and children.
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