Parents Who Have Successfully
Fought Parent Alienation Syndrome
by A. Jayne Major, Ph.D.
www.livingmedia2000.com
Introduction:
Nothing stirs up passions more than the controversy generated when parents are at war
over the custody of a child. A controversy is an issue where evidence on both sides can
make a compelling case. It is never black and white, but when people have their emotions
aroused, an issue can quickly turn into two polar opposites. 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 promoting one side over another 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 I founded in Los Angeles in
1983. Many of these parents 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 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 their
parent, 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 takes sides? I came to realize
that this level of conflict in custody disputes was a fallout from sweeping societal
changes.
What Has Changed?
In the 1960s and through the 1970s, feminists told fathers that they must
take a more active role in raising their children. Women were going to work, going back to
college and pursuing careers as never before. A shift then began as fathers became more
involved in the day-to-day care of their children than was true in previous generations.
While 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 1970s several
states passed "no-fault" divorce laws, where anyone who wanted out of a marriage
was free to leave. Some have called them the "no guilt laws." There was a
proliferation of divorce that was historically unprecedented.
After the breakup of the family, many fathers wanted to continue to be involved with
the care of their children. 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. These laws helped to level the playing field for fathers. Other
states also passed joint custody laws. Unfortunately, there still exist states that do not
have laws supporting joint custody.
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 70s. 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 1980s
courts began to increasingly ignore gender in determining child custody, which removed the
automatic allocation of full custody rights to the mother, and mothers began to have less
time with her children. Instead, courts looked first at how the custody could be shared,
and if that wasnt 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. Thus, in the 1980s 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 are able to share custody of their children, and they work out childcare
issues in an amicable way. A large number of women were relieved to have fathers share
childcare. This enabled them to pursue their personal goals involving 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. The stakes got even higher when the legal system was used to resolve these
difficult problems. In extreme cases, the alienation of a childs affection against a
targeted parent became a bizarre escalation of the intensity of the conflict.
Who Discovered Parent Alienation Syndrome (PAS)?
In association with this burgeoning child-custody litigation, forensic psychiatrist Dr.
Richard A. Gardner first identified Parent Alienation Syndrome in the 1980s. He
noticed a dramatic increase in the frequency of a disorder rarely seen before, that of
programming or brainwashing of a child by one parent to denigrate the other parent.
However, the disorder wasnt only brainwashing or programming by a parent, but was
confounded by what he calls self-created contributions by the child in support of the
alienating parents 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.
What is PAS?
Gardners definition of PAS is:
The parental alienation syndrome (PAS) is a disorder that arises primarily in the
context of child-custody disputes. Its primary manifestation is the childs campaign
of denigration against a parent, a campaign that has no justification. It results from the
combination of a programming (brainwashing) parents indoctrinations and the
childs own contributions to the vilification of the target parent.
Excerpted from: Gardner, R.A. (1998). The Parental Alienation Syndrome, Second
Edition, Cresskill, NJ: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
What is the Childs Part in PAS?
Gardner notes that the PAS is more than brainwashing or programming, because the
child has to actually participate in the denigrating of the alienated parent. This is done
in primarily the following eight ways:
- 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 doesnt 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 also include the friends and/or extended family of the alienated
parent.
In severe cases of parent alienation, the child is utterly brainwashed against the
alienated parent. The alienator can truthfully say that the child doesnt want to
spend any time with the other parent, even though he or she has told the child that he has
to, it is a court order, etc. The alienator typically responds, "There isnt
anything that I can do about it. Im not telling the child that he cant see
you."
Parent Alienation (PA) and PAS are Different
Parent alienation (PA) describes those situations where the child is justified in
desiring to alienate himself from a parent, as circumstances where neglect or abuse is
present, including molestation or abandonment.
Dr. Doug Darnall in his book Divorce Casualties: Protecting Your Children from
Parental Alienation, describes three categories of PAS. The mild category he calls the
naïve alienators. They are ignorant of what they are doing and are willing to be
educated and to 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 dont want to admit that they were out of control. The severe
category are the obsessed alienators. They operate from a delusional system where
every cell of their body is committed to destroying the other parents relationship
with the child. In the latter case, Darnall notes that we dont have an effective
protocol for treating an obsessed alienator other than removing the child from his or her
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 childs animosity would be
justified. Also, it is not PAS if the child still has a positive relationship with the
parent, even though the other parent is attempting to alienate the child from him or her.
Which Gender is Most Likely to Initiate PAS?
Gardners statistics showed that the majority of PAS occurrences were initiated by
mothers. Mothers have traditionally had primary custody of children (in this century), and
have usually spent more time with the children. In order for a campaign of alienation to
occur, one parent needs to have considerable time with the child.
However, Ive seen some dramatic cases where the father was the alienator. In one
case, the father had no control over his obsession to speak badly about the mother.
Numerous professionals told him, including the mother, that he could share custody if he
was willing to follow the rules. He didnt have the self-control to do this. When he
lost custody because of his aberrant behavior, he became a cause celèbre in the
fathers 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 many professionals worked to stabilize it.
Moreover, in cultures where women traditionally have no tangible rights, the alienation
by the father can be very severe. Ive 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 was denied 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?
When parents first separate there is often parent alienation. For example, due to the
anxiety of the mother, she is likely to implicitly impart to a child that he or she is not
safe with the father. She might say "Call me as soon as you get there to let me know
you are okay." "If you get scared, you call me right away. Okay?"
"Ill come get you if you want to come home." Usually this level of
alienation dies down after the separating couple get used to changes brought on by the
separation and move on with their lives.
However, in rare cases, the anxiety doesnt calm down, it escalates. PAS parents
are psychologically fragile. When things are going their way, they can hold themselves
together. However, when they are threatened, they can become fiercely entrenched in
preserving what they see as rightfully theirs. Only a small percentage end up in this
level of conflict.
Why Do PAS Parents Act Like They Do?
I believe that PAS parents have become stuck in the first stage of child development,
where survival skills are learned. To them, having total control over their child is a
life and death matter. Because they dont understand how to please other people, any
effort to do so always has strings attached. They dont give; they only know how to
take. They dont 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). The
parent is narcissistic (self-centered) and enmeshed with the child (overly involved).
Furthermore, these parents 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.
A person with these characteristics, they may be called a sociopath, a person who has
no moral conscience. This means that they are unable to have empathy or compassion for
others. Sociopaths are unable to see a situation from another persons point of view,
especially their childs point-of-view. They dont distinguish the way others do
between telling the truth and lying.
In spite of admonitions from judges and mental health professionals to stop alienating,
they cant. The prognosis for severely alienating parents is poor. It is unlikely
that they will ever "get it." It is also unlikely that they will ever stop
trying to perpetuate the alienation. It 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 mothers 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. Such as, learning to put oneself back to sleep, eat, toilet train and
care for ones hygiene. Instead of promoting this independence, the alienating parent
encourages continued dependence. The parent may insist on sleeping with the child, feeding
the child ("Its 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 he or she does not have enough ego strength to do anything
about it.
A PAS mother cant imagine that the father is capable of planning the childs
time while in his care. Therefore, she arranges several things for the child to do while
at the fathers 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 childs
extended family on the fathers side. The mother desperately wants control over the
time when the child isnt 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 is that 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?
When children spend time with the father, and enjoy it, they are put into a double
bind. Clearly, they cannot tell the mother that dad treats them well or that they had fun
together. They want to bond with the father, but dont dare. They figure out on which
side the bread is buttered (who has the power), and their survival needs tug at them.
Therefore, children will tell the mother about everything they didnt enjoy about
time spent with the father, which will add to her belief that they dont like to be
with him. These children feel that they must protect the mother. The same is true when the
alienator is the father. The child will avoid expressing their affectionate feelings for
the mother to him.
Family Volatility
Families with PAS are volatile families. The father may have indeed spanked a child, or
lashed out at the mother physically or emotionally. An isolated incidence can turn into a
holocaust. One father spanked his rebellious child and ended up in jail on child abuse
charges, followed by a six-week trial to determine his guilt. The jury returned with a not
guilty verdict in 20 minutes. The verdict didnt end it as far as the mother was
concerned, however.
The alienating parents 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 PAS parent
feels that these reports are not fabrications, but are very, very real. She can describe
the horror of what happened in great detail. Regardless of the actual truth, in her mind,
it did happen. Most of the alienated fathers I work with are continually befuddled by the
mothers lying. "How can she lie like that?" They dont realize that
these lies are not based on rational thinking. Alienating parents 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
What makes this problem very complicated is that PAS is often intergenerational in
dysfunctional families. Almost always the alienator has people within the family who
support the alienation. It might be the mother, father or grandparent who encourages
fighting. These supporters are likely to assist the alienating parent financially and
actually provide massive amounts of money to fund litigation. This is further proof to the
PAS parent that he or she is justified in what he or she is doing.
When the Child is Placed in the Role of the Parents Therapist
Alienation advances when the alienating parent uses the child as a personal therapist.
The child is told about every miserable experience and negative feeling about the
alienated parent with great specificity. The child, who is already enmeshed with the
parent because his or her identity is still undefined, easily absorbs the parents
negativity. They become aligned with this parent and feel that they need to be the
protector of the alienating parent.
What Happens to the Child When it is Impossible to 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 childs 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 could contribute
to enrich the childs life. Many of these children 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 isnt likely that these children
will ever figure it out. However, there have been exceptions where the child and the
alienated parent have been successfully reunited later in life.
How Can Good Intentions Backfire?
Those people who are typically called upon to handle such difficult situations, such as
the police, social workers, attorneys or psychologists assume that what the frightened
mother is saying is true. These things DO happen. There are men who are seriously
disturbed, violent, out of control sexually, and who stalk. There are men who are
rightfully feared. The mother is very convincing in her desperation and vivid in her
descriptions. The clincher is that the alienated child collaborates with the mother by
saying, "Yes, I am afraid of my father." "Yes, my father did touch me down
there." "Yes, he does beat me." What would you do if you were faced with
having to decide how to protect a child in such a situation?
Therapists
Therapists with masters degrees are unlikely to realize the severity and depth of
the problem, because they are not trained in this level of pathology. In fact, they may
unwittingly side with the alienating parent and even testify or produce evidence in court
that the child is afraid of the father. This can be a serious stumbling block in getting
an accurate diagnosis. Indeed, it can tip the scale into the alienating parents
agenda and do real damage.
Our courts, social services and mental health workers are all committed to stopping
child abuse and neglect when they see it occurring. However, in PAS the most dramatic and
the loudest complaint ends up being acted upon before there is an investigation as to the
accuracy of the allegation. This allows the alienating parent considerable 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 at the Ph.D. level 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. Once the evaluator has written a report of 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 the childs best interest to stay
in that environment. It is rare 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?
Judges are inevitably conservative in their orders. Even when the evidence is
overwhelming that the alienation is occurring, the court order may still end up saying,
"the parents are to make joint decisions about the childs welfare," when
this may be impossible to do. This is further evidence that the judge doesnt
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 dont 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.
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 boys
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 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 fathers
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 disproven by forensic evaluators, she was still
confused.
Can the Alienation Be Reversed?
As children get older, the alienation can be reversed with proper psychological care.
However, it wont work if the alienating parent is not contained. In the last case
described above the mother was given severely limited visiting rights. She had remarried
and had a new child, however, she still regularly calls the police to report the father
for abuse. Presently, the daughter resides with her father, receives weekly therapy and
hates the police. She gradually understands how disturbed her mother is.
In the former case, where the mother was kidnapping the children to Australia she now
sees them two hours a month at the Department of Childrens Services with a social
worker present to monitor everything 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 childs 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?
The parents who were successful in getting primary custody of their children in a PAS
situation were those who:
- Completed a comprehensive parenting course, such as Breakthrough Parenting, and who
stuck around until they rated excellent in the knowledge, skills and methods taught there.
Thus, their parenting skills became superior.
- Were even tempered, logical and kept their emotions under control. They never
retaliated. A person who reacts in anger is proving the alienators point that he or
she is unstable.
- Thought of giving up, but never did. No matter how awful the harassment got, they
worried about leaving their children 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.
- Were willing and able to go to the financial expense of seeing it through.
- Got legal representation from a skilled family lawyer who had experience with parent
alienation syndrome. The parent became good at understanding how the courts work and
understood the law as it applied to their case. They often ended up as pro-per
(representing themselves) because of excessive expenses.
- Had a case where a forensic evaluator made a strong statement about the alienation and
recommended 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.
- 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 that the child would be well taken care of in their care.
- Even though they and their children were being victimized, they understood the nature of
the problem and focused more on what to do about it. Alienated parents who got caught up
in how terrible it all is and spent time judging the situation, went under emotionally.
Thus, the successful ones didnt live a victims life. They were proactive in
seeking constructive action. They avoided adding to the problem.
- One father expressed it like this: "I dont know how to make it better with
the mother, but I do know how to make it worse." He was one of the more successful
parents I met in fighting the PAS problem because he stayed in the role of the
peacekeeper.
- Kept a diary or journal of key events, describing what happened and when. They
documented the alienation with evidence that was admissible in court.
- Always called or showed up to pick up their children, even if they knew that the
children wouldnt be there. This was often very painful, but then they could document
that they had tried, when the alienator alleged that this parent had no interest in the
child.
- Focused on enjoying their childrens 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 didnt let the children overhear inappropriate
conversations on the telephone.
- Didnt violate court orders. They paid their child support on time and proved that
they could live within the letter of the law.
- Were truly decent, principled people. It was obvious that they loved their children.
PAS cases are the most difficult to figure out, even for professionals in the field of
divorce. Once the syndrome is discovered, it is even harder to figure out what to do about
it. It is important to be connected and supported by compassionate people while going
through such a difficult time.