Coping with Parental Alienation
Courtesy of TEXAS FATHERS FOR EQUAL RIGHTS
Non-custodial parents often face a continuing dilemma, knowing how to
respond to certain mind-programming propaganda that the children receive from the
custodial parent. Every reference to the non-custodial parent is couched in negative
words: "lazy, irresponsible, un-loving, and cheapskate," to name a few. The
childrens emotions and behavior patterns that result from this negative programming
have been officially dubbed by the psychological community as the Parental Alienation
Syndrome, and when the parent doing the alienation has full-time access to the
children, the consequences can be devastating to the relationship between the child and
the other parent. It is also devastating to the child as the child comes to realize that
half of who they are, is a product of that "lowlife" other parent.
Parental alienation deprives the children of their right to know that
they have two parents who love them. Regrettably, the parent responsible for the
alienation seldom realizes or cares that such deprivation is a form of psychological child
abuse. Life becomes difficult enough for the targeted parent, but the children are the
real victims of the immature behavior from a parent with vengeance in their head and
heart.
How should non-custodial parents respond, knowing that our children are
being programmed to hate? Human nature says, "Get even take advantage of every
opportunity to reverse the picture, and let the children know how crafty and calculating
the other parent really is ... what evil lurks in their heart!" Of course, the
problem with this solution is that it is no solution at all; it only compounds the
problem. Children dont need both parents making villains of each other!
Clearly, the solution must include a self-imposed rule that "I
will never, in the presents of the children, say anything bad about the other
parent," however lackluster that approach may seem. Children must never be made
hockey-pucks in a standoff between two embittered adults; nor should they be put into a
position of having to take sides to gain the approval of either of their parents. Where
the facts support a negative opinion about either parent, the children will eventually
reach that conclusion on their own.
Meanwhile, the best way to over come parental alienation, is to
continue to be the best parent we know how to be. We must use what time we do have with
the children in positive, constructive ways to demonstrate that we are mature,
responsible, and loving parents. Indisputably, this approach requires that we have
frequent access to our children, and where that is lacking, we must work to rectify that
problem first.
If we arent seeing our children because we have become too busy,
we must re-vamp our priorities and put the children up-front. If we arent seeing
them because we are being denied court-ordered access, we need to pursue the legal
remedies that are available. The volunteers who work in our office can share their
experiences with this process and the attorneys at our Saturday seminars can explain, in
detail, these remedies. These legal solutions will not be explained here, other than to
mention the possibility of requesting a court order for the children and the hostile
parent to accompany you to family therapy to begin rebuilding the parent-child
relationship. If therapy fails, it may become necessary to remove the children from the
hostile environment, through a deviation from the standard possession order, to protect
the childrens emotional well-being.
Once we do establish regular access to our children, the first visits
can be awkward, knowing that everything we do or say is being evaluated through
not-so-rosy colored glasses. The following suggestions have been made to some of our TFER
members by various psychologists, counselors, and members of the clergy, for rebuilding
relationships in the wake of parental alienation.
1. Chart your own course of action. When your allow another
persons behavior to determine your own action, you are controlled by that person.
Other people can control you, only to the extent that you let them. Decide for yourself
how you are going to interact with your children, and dont allow anybody to stop
you.
2. Redefine the meaning of "I hate you!" You are
likely to hear this heart-breaking phrase more than once, and its essential to your
mental health that you put hatred into a proper perspective. Hate is not the
opposite of love; the opposite of love is indifference and disregard. Hate
is more like another dimension of love ... when your child hollers, "I hate
you!," he is really saying, "Im still very much emotionally involved with
you and right now, it happens to be negative!" When you understand hatred in
this context, you dont have to start-out feeling totally defeated; you begin working
to slowly, gradually re-route the negative emotions into more positive ones.
3. Do "commercials" for yourself, but dont overdo
it. There is little benefit to be gained by a marathon-style denial of accusations
which you believe have been made. Its more productive to plant a few positive /
constructive seeds for future germination ... and then cultivate that garden. Help the
children to recall the closeness, or togetherness that once existed between you. For
example, "remember when you were little, how we used to go to Indian Princess
campouts (or ride bicycles, or whatever) together? ... I enjoyed that ... how about
you? What did you like most about it?" We can also use ordinary daily events to our
advantage, such as if a child asks us to lie for them. We can instill our personal values
in the child by responding, "No dear, I wont lie for you; and you dont
really want me to anyone who will lie for you will lie to you."
4. Remember that "money cant buy me love." You
need not run an extravagant "daddys weekend Disneyland" to let the kids
know that you love them. Your time and attention mean more than some lavish show, so hold
the spending to a level that you can comfortably afford. Overspending conveys the message
that "you can use me and abuse my finances, in the name of love." It says, I am
a sucker, and you can manipulate me by using the word love. When we overspend to
gain approval, we receive false, temporary affection, at best, and set ourselves up for
future disappointment. We must be cautious not to teach the children that a certain amount
of dishonesty, or manipulation, in relationships is okay. Instead, we should lavish them
with time, affection, concern and involvement.
5. Discipline the children! As the non-custodial parent, we
sometimes find it easier to let the children get-away with things, than to correct
inappropriate behavior and risk re-igniting the childrens hatred for us. Yet, we
must let the children experience the natural consequences of their actions, insisting that
they assume full ownership of their own behavior. Let them know the boundaries and the
consequences of unacceptable behavior. Then be firm and consistent in enforcing the
consequences.
6. Understand the teenage mind. Once the children enter into
adolescence, we must learn to distinguish between the withdrawn, rebellious, obnoxious
behavior which stems from the mere fact that they are teenagers, and the behavior /
attitudes that result from parental alienation. The "Teenage Psyche" chapter of
Bob Meehans book Beyond the Yellow Brick Road (Farnsworth Publishing) will
help us to remember the inner conflict created by the teenagers urgent need to gain
a sense of independence, while still having strong emotional ties to his parents. We must
learn to "let go" when our teenagers would rather be with their friends than
with ourselves, and must not confuse the emerging independent streak with the parental
alienation syndrome. Dont take it personally!
7. Let the children learn at their own pace. If your child
occasionally surprises you with a comment about the other parent, which indicates that the
child is thinking for himself and beginning to figure things out, you must resist the
temptation to offer "supplemental thinking" to reinforce the childs
conclusion. The child must do this thinking for himself, at his own pace, to make it
meaningful and lasting.
8. Refuse to be crippled by parental alienation. When we allow
ourselves to get caught-up in obsessive "poor me" thinking, we pick-up a crutch
that prevents forward movement; then we stagnate in a pool of self-pity and become
ineffectual at acting in the best interest of the children. We are reacting, rather than
acting. We must avoid that rut by defining realistic parent-child relationship goals, then
constructing a positive action plan for achieving them. Sometimes we will find it
necessary to revise the goals and the action plan, and that doesnt necessarily mean
we have failed it means that we are dealing constructively with the reality of ever
changing circumstances.
We acknowledge that we have "lost" our children for the
short-term; now we will go for the long-term, knowing that it will take time, patience,
and persistence. What happens in the childrens other household is beyond our
control, but we can take effective control of our own lives, always seeking "the
serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I
can, and the wisdom to know the difference."