Posts Tagged “Parental Alienation”

Parental Alienation: Accuracy and the DSM-IV

 

What is the DSM?

“Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) is the standard classification of mental disorders used by mental health professionals in the United States and contains a listing of diagnostic criteria for every psychiatric disorder recognized by the U.S. healthcare system. The current edition, DSM-IV-TR, is used by professionals in a wide array of contexts, including psychiatrists and other physicians, psychologists, social workers, nurses, occupational and rehabilitation therapists, and counselors, as well as by clinicians and researchers of many different orientations (e.g., biological, psychodynamic, cognitive, behavioral, interpersonal, family/systems). It is used in both clinical settings (inpatient, outpatient, partial hospital, consultation-liaison, clinic, private practice, and primary care) as well as with community populations. In addition to supplying detailed descriptions of diagnostic criteria, DSM is also a necessary tool for collecting and communicating accurate public health statistics about the diagnosis of psychiatric disorders.”

This morning there was an article titled “Mental health professionals getting update on definitions” by Gary Rotstein from the Post-Gazette in Pittsburgh.  This article misinterpreted a fact about parental alienation and the DSM. Mr. Rotstein  wrote  There was consideration of hoarding this time as a mental health issue, but it failed to make it into the recommendations for full manual treatment. There are always lobbyists for parental alienation syndrome, but they did not win out this time either.”

According to the DSM website, Parental Alienation is still being considered as an addition to the DSM. There are many advocates and professionals that are exerting countless hours in establishing research that validates Parental Alienation would be a worthy addition to the DSM. It is believed that if Parental Alienation is entered into the DSM that it would be considered monumental in recognizing that parental alienation exists. There are numerous amounts of professionals in the mental health and judicial community that do not endorse parental alienation as a valid diagnosis. Parental Alienation is still a very controversial topic with professionals and the general public. It only hurts the efforts when there inaccurate reports to dismay the general masses who are in favor of the inclusion of Parental Alienation.

What can you do to help?

Dr. William Bernet is leading the effort to include Parental Alienation into the newest addition of the DSM-5, which is expected to be released in May 2013. Many parents and adult survivors have assisted in this effort by writing the leadership of the DSM and making them aware of the severity of Parental Alienation.

Any person who wishes to express his or her opinion about the inclusion of parental alienation in DSM-V may want to contact the following individuals:

Dr. Kupfer is chair of theDSM-V Task Force Dr. Regier is vice-chair of theDSM-V Task Force Dr. Pine is chair of the DSM-VDisorders in Childhood andAdolescence Work Group
David J. Kupfer, M.D.Western Psychiatric Institute 3811 O’Hara StreetPittsburgh, PA  15213  Darrel A. Regier, M.D.American Psychiatric Assn.1000 Wilson Blvd., Suite 1825

Arlington, VA  22209-3901

 

 Daniel S. Pine, M.D.NIMH15K North Drive, MSC-2670

Bethesda, MD  20892-2670

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February 15, 2010 Posted Under: Parental Alienation in the News   Read More

Parent Coach Radio: Blended Families

Tonight is part Two of this series, Last week we took on this topic and dissected the components of blended families. If you were not able to listen last week join us as we continue to answer questions and discuss the joys and hardships of Step Families.
Brigitte Wanberg from My Life Instruction will join Chrissy and Lary tonight at 8pm EST. Many of you have addressed the need for a show topic regarding “Blended Families” This topic is a major adjustment in a family setting. Some families are able to co parent successfully until a new “step” parent comes along.We will discuss healthy co parenting strategies and also the warning signs when parental alienation may become apparent.  The jealousy of either party can bring a conflict and the co parenting techniques break down then it welcomes  parental alienation to break the bond between parent and child. 

Join us tonight at 8pm EST as we talk about this important aspect of Parenting and Parental Alienation

TO CALL IN LIVE DURING THE SHOW    724-898-1660


FREE LIVE CHAT STARTS AT 8PM EST
http://budurl. com/liveshowtime chat%20

Brigitte holds a Master of Science in Marriage, Family & Child Therapy, a Post-Bachelorette in Elementary Education, and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. Brigitte is an Internationally Certified Consultant on Diversity & Women’s Issues. She is a Certified Teen Addiction Trainer for Teen Addiction Anonymous.

Brigitte has extensive experience and education in counseling, teaching and behavioral health settings. Brigitte has combined her knowledge and vision to form, My Life Instruction, a consulting practice that provides instruction and support to individuals, couples and families who wish to create their “ideal” relationship with self and others. She has great success working collaboratively with clients, family members, diverse professionals and members of the community.

Brigitte’s previous experience includes counseling in agency settings. In addition, she was a patient advocate at The Arizona State Hospital, in civil and forensic populations; advocated for human rights for the Arizona Department of Behavioral Health, taught court-ordered, oppositionally defiant middle school boys and provided case management to severely mentally ill consumers. She has been an elementary school teacher and a paralegal.

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January 21, 2010 Posted Under: Research and Studies on PA   Read More

Shattered Illusions

pa-hurts-2-300x223As an advocate of parental alienation I walk a fine line with gender issues between father’s rights and also mother’s rights. The real issue at hand is parental rights but people are so wrapped up in the who or what to blame they forget that people come from different walks of life and various circumstances.  How does one woman tell the story of her life to help true victims without it crossing the lines of offense? The story of truth sets some free while others use it as a line of defense for blame. I have wanted to share a story for years but have been silent, love me or hate me there is a story that walks outside of the boundaries the movement sets in stone. How do we become stronger without tying some of these issues together? Many women and men make up lies to win a battle but what happens to the individual that falls in the cracks and has a truthful story of abuse.

 

In 1991 at the age of 16 I married a young 18 yr old man. In my own mind I believed this would be forever and a life that I dreamed of with happiness. My years prior were filled with abuse and I fell captive to the illusion of love that my husband professed. The silent beginning that only few know about is that the abuse had already occurred prior to our wedding date. The incidents were forgiven quickly because at least he would tell me he was sorry or that he couldn’t live without me. Those words were more than my father would tell me so I believed the words streaming out of his mouth to my ears.

The first two years of our marriage I wore a blindfold to truth and allowed the punching bag sessions to continue. The emptiness I felt as a person was clear to others who knew me. In this time period he was also indulging himself with another woman that he never laid a hand on. I found out I was pregnant with my son and thought this would be a stepping stone for change. It was defiantly a stepping stone because his mistress was also pregnant.  I can remember wondering if I did everything he asked would it all change.

The years went on and the progression of abuse became a ritual in my everyday life. The fighting was constant and I left on several occasions to only return after the charm of change was lingering in my ears. His words became harsher and the restrictions were like a half way house. Cell phones were a convince many people delighted in but to me it was a constant communication of “Where are you, what are you doing?” 

My daughter was a new addition and I was often baffled when I was hit during my pregnancy. More time had passed and the physical abuse was less but another abuse was occurring to take its place. I would almost find myself wishing the physical and mental abuse was the only aspects I had to experience.  The pain of being raped by a person who tells you they love you is a confusing time. The battle of self confidence became a major contention in my mind. It broke me emotionally on several occasions and only after the act would I hear the apologizes then the excuse, you can’t rape a spouse.  I spent time trying to understand what was wrong with me.

 

I can recollect a time during a family graduation in the past three years where I went to the event and he decided to stay home. I was with his family members and because there was a lie band I did not hear my phone ring. He came all the way out there around midnight because he wanted me to be home to tend to him. He was angry because I didn’t answer my  cell phone and I paid for that one.  I walked on egg shells even with his own family events.

Our children were a negotiation tool for his selfish needs.  He rarely ever carried out the duties of a father unless he was in the mood. He would have more interest of looking me in the bedroom than having a catch with his son or baking with his daughter. I longed for participation with us as a family instead I believed an illusion of what I thought it should be.

 

This is only a small fragment of the 18 yrs of abuse that I survived. I fell for a life of self imposed illusions to live day to day.  My illusion fractured a healthy mind set to realize that he wouldn’t change I had to.  I allowed myself to believe this distorted fairytale for 18 years. His negative terminology generated raw emotion of pain and the lack of worth as a person. I have struggled to find who I am without him telling me who I should be.  I have been beaten down in many ways but have found the strength to stand back up and find myself.  Dan still continues to hold my son at ransom; he allows negative behavior to continue with complete disrespect to me. I’m told it’s between you and him, meanwhile my sons screaming at me in his father’s presence. He sits our daughter down for a five hour “chat” to tell her not to listen to me. He cries in front of her using guilt and saying how I left them all, my children are used as a ransom in his ploy to win them over after years of his neglect.

 Dan Chrzanowski  stole my dignity and years of my life but now I have taken my life back to leave a greater legacy to my children.  A legacy of what love should be

Corinthians 13

4Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

 8Love never fails. But where there are prophecies, they will cease; where there are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away. 9For we know in part and we prophesy in part, 10but when perfection comes, the imperfect disappears. 11When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put childish ways behind me. 12Now we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.

 13And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.

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The Chaos Theory and Parental Alienation

Parental Alienation HurtsThe price that an alienated parent pays when leaving a harmful situation is often times a much higher one than is ever expected. The complex positioning of abusers and the effects to our children are detrimental to our society and their futures. I know many parents that come to the same conclusions when they sit back and try to cherish their own memories of their sons and daughters after separating from a dysfunctional spouse or partner.

In my personal experience, growing up with parental alienation, I strongly believe that children are not who they were destined to be in their life because they are often forced to side with one parent to the detriment of the other and are robbed of their childhood by a selfish parent. The child loses the benefit of both parents.  A child learns from the adults they are surrounded by and they learn to share their values and thinking patterns to what is right or wrong, likewise when surrounded by dysfunction they are more likely to develop dysfunctional patterns. In adolescents, their minds are fragile and can be transformed into an alienator’s dream because the children are taught to share in the hatred and lie their way through life. The fragile minds are tricked into believing that there is fear and they have to maintain a loyalty to the alienating parent.

My perspective on the effects of parental alienation is becoming a fear of what we are creating for our inheriting generation. Main factors that we deal with are the behavior patterns of the alienator that are dysfunctional and that by itself has many components of abuse or other anomalies that are being passed on to our children as being “normal.” The foundation of parental alienation goes far beyond our immediate comprehension, because all behaviors and their results are so complicated and intertwined, very much like the movie “The Butterfly Effect,” where the effects of the changes and actions are not fully understood. There is a very intense book called “Abuse Excuse” and while reading this book I saw society and parental alienation in an expanded light. Everything in society is becoming based more on emotion and then logic.The base knowledge that there is a cause and effect for ones actions is now a rarity.  In society we look at media and feel the emotion for missing children or even feel sympathy when a victim kills their abuser in self-defense. In some cases these “victims” go free because they have a sympathetic jury. What is it that we are teaching our children about self-responsibility, coping, and their own futures?

How do we retain the basics for children that form ethics and positive outcomes for our children’s futures when dysfunction is being poised as the new normal?  The legacies children are receiving are filled with pain and turmoil that is handed down from generations. Parental Alienation is only a small portion of the problem; it is a branch that grows off a bigger root. Due to circumstances in our lives we believe that narcissism and border line personality disorder is the normal everyday occurrence as frequency of the disorders increase.  As we have seen within the children that positive and negative traits are inherited or taught through interaction and their environment. In most cases these children have no middle ground to understand but they gain the wisdom to be unique in getting what they want while struggling with both sides of extreme behavior.

One parent might be the disciplinarian and the other parent might not be consistent with any rules. This is a perfect analogy where there is no middle ground and in time the child learns to just ask the inconsistent parent for their needs.  The pain children experienced infused with an alienator’s hatred and anger progresses into a state of mind muddied with the survivor skills that are acquired and carried for the rest of their lives. The very skills that parents have been taught and now being taught to the next generation.

We have learned that in many cases of parental alienation that even our ex-spouses most likely have a narcissistic personality disorder. This is a beginning to understanding the nature of the beast when negative behaviors are being passed onto our children. But how had these skills been introduced to this person to act on, which clearly demonstrates several generations of parental authority being undermined by someone and other generational dysfunction that is being handed down to children. They have a fear of abandonment or abuse that has occurred in their past, there is always a negative that has consumed them. In society we have framed a foundation based on these negatives and accepted it as a positive explanation. The hard cold truth is this will never go away until the base foundation is corrected and bad logic being corrected.

We want to enlighten our children to see the truth of whom and what we are; parents spend more time trying to prove they are the opposite of the lies when it comes to being targeted by an alienator.  This strategy is time consuming and in my opinion just proving to the child that the alienator is correct. Be the parent you are, we use excuses that the children do not know better that is why they act like this.. Until recently I even believed that course of action but where does that line become reality of children being responsible for their actions. Yes they might have confused the facts with help but at a certain point a child should not be allowed to disrespect you despite being encouraged or validated by the alienating parent. In our longing to have interaction with our children we are silently teaching them it’s ok to behave in this manner.

The principles of positive parenting are becoming desolate as these circumstances become part of the pattern of behavior. I have seen the outcome of generations in my family burdened with these various patterns. This is the legacy I was left and now I’m living as an alienated parent. This journey is never finished especially since my daughter’s is just beginning. This vicious cycle is about to be broken with my daughter, but first I had to take a look at myself to see the flaws in my foundation to make a new cycle of love rather than abuse.

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From Pain to Sane During The Holidays

pa-hurts-2The holiday season has arrived as it does every year. The season is one that is recognized for family celebrations and children opening presents with food and laughter. In some houses there will be a silence that will remind of us of the term parental alienation. These homes will be reminded of memories past and the old traditions that brought smiles and warm fuzzy emotions that are affiliated with Christmas.

During these weeks the pain threshold is increased to unlimited reminders of the time you don’t have with your children. While we are hiding from the holidays we are constantly prompted by the visions of lights, commercials, and children in our midst.  We have friends and family that understand to a limit and we feel alone in a whirlwind of tears that we alone cry. It is painful to be a non custodial parent and while it is healthy to grieve there needs to come a time when we say life goes on. There is nothing selfish in this thought process.

Below are some helpful suggestions that might make your holiday season more manageable and easier to cope with. It will be an easier process if you plan ahead and know this is a task that needs your assistance to help others.

  • Open your home to other non custodial parents
  • Don’t be home alone spend it with family and friends if possible
  • Spend some time at a homeless shelter and help serve their needs
  • Help under privileged children
  • Put together an outing with others so no one is an “orphan” for the holidays.
  • Take a vacation with a friend
  • Plan a new project

These are not easy transitions to acquire and will take time. You will still have emotions of sadness but they will not be over cumbering to you.  Sometimes we isolate ourselves in our own misery and we make it harder to climb out of the trenches of our pain.  We must remember in divorce children also have mixed emotions about the holidays. 

On Thanksgiving night Parental Alienation Hurts and Get Your Justice Live will have our annual Holiday Support Call. Many of us come together to share memories, tears, and yes even a few laughs in the process.  The call is takes place from 8pm EST: To call in live during the show dial 724-898-1660

 Join us via the computer FREE LIVE CHAT STARTS AT 8PM EST  http://budurl.com/liveshowtimechat

I hope to see some of you there to know you’re not alone this holiday.

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Happy 17th Birthday Justin

justin ceToday is a day that I look back seventeen years and remember your first breathe.  I can easily remember you moving inside me and when you wanted into this world it was when you wanted.  Every year was and is a milestone of laughter and fond memories.  Your first year of life was hard because of you being born a preemie but you and I were glued together from the very beginning.

Your first birthday was decorated with Mickey Mouse and mommy like normal went all out for my dudda bugs special occasion. You were fascinated by your animated Barney and water tether.  You grew so fast and then fell head over heels with the Lion King.  Simba was a trademark I will never forget and you slept with that bear every night.  I look back on these memories and cherish them as every parent does.  Your birthday was always a great celebration, even on your third birthday when we had a huge party at Chuckie Cheese and you and I played in the ball pit for hours.  Your fourth birthday in Wisconsin and I made your beautiful bear cake but Aladdin was the theme and you were nervous because you had girls there from your Pre K class.

I have a memory of every birthday while you were growing up even your birthdays when you were older and we had 15 boys over playing football in the dark until we all were frozen pop cycles.  These are the memories we both share.  You are becoming a man and the time has gone by so fast.

I know in my heart you love me despite what you say or do.  I want you to have a wonderful birthday as I have given you every year.  You are not forgotten and no matter what everyone says I’m still your biggest fan and mother.  My door is always open to you to talk o to even lie in my lap as you always did, I miss watching you play video games or even our battles in Guitar Hero. 

I pray today that you find love and hope.

  My son
I am here
I cannot protect you
From the world.

My son
I am here
I can only love you
No matter what

My son
I am here
My love unconditional
On this you can rely

My son
I am here
To guide and to teach you
And now you must fly

My son 
I am here
Life can be difficult
I hear your cry

My son 
I am here
Changes are painful
Never forget who you are

My son 
I am here
Maintain the faith 
In yourself and in God

My son
I am here
Self acceptance is yours
Do not fear

My son
I am here 

Rose Falcone 

 Justin my love is always here and has never gone away.  You are my son and nobody will take that from me.  In time I know we will be together again.  Enjoy your day and when you close your eyes to blow out your candles that I’m there in your mind, heart, and spirit. Mommy loves her dudda bug.

Happy Birthday Justin

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Sarah Palin Accused of Alienating Grandson

pa-hurts-2In this article there is another example of alienation. We can all agree that if the case is high profile or a local divorce, child custody can turn into an ugly arena of turmoil.  I chose this article because it touches on the rights of parents and grandparents. We see the dialogue between Johnston and the Palin’s and most people not educated on this would have a variety of reactions.

The mixed emotions will spread gossip across the media outlets and destroy a family but most important a child and their future. Sarah has the right to be a grandparent but most importantly Johnston has the right to be a father.  This is becoming a common story that is neglected in the eyes of many professionals and family units across the nation.  There is a public spotlight on Sarah Palin that can destroy her political career; one can only hope for the child’s sake that this is resolved in a Collaborative Law setting.

Sarah Palin Accused of Alienating Grandson

Posted by Lisa in Child Custody with the tags ,  on November 2, 2009

 

sarahpalinFormer vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin could be heading into an ugly court battle. Levi Johnston, father of Palin’s grandson is threatening with legal steps to allow him access to his son Tripp. The 19-year old may have made not so helpful headlines as the date of Bristol an almost son-in-law of the Palins, but a public legal fight may be even less desirable for Sarah Palin, especially if Johnston can provide evidence supporting his alienation allegations.

Johnston and the Palins have been in a heated debate over the access to Tripp and Johnston now claims that the situation is bad enough that a court battle cannot be avoided. In a recent interview he stated that Sarah Palin is preventing him from seeing his child: “I’m up to the point where I can’t see my kid again. I’m done. I’m sure we’ll end up in court. We’re definitely going to court,” he said.

He recently started paying child support, but his calls asking for the child are not being returned, Johnston claims. Palin, on the other side, says that Johnston is lying. Her lawyer stated that Johnston is always welcome to see Tripp. At this point, it seems too early to judge who is playing what game,  whether Palin in fact is preventing Johnston to see his child and whether she is engaging in alienation, which is a serious charge that can have a major impact on child custody.

Legally, grandparents are considered “significant others” in child custody cases and while courts generally tend to grant grandparents access to their grandchildren, there can also be the question whether grandparents have an adverse influence, intended or not, on a child. The Palin’s situation is an interesting one, as 18-year-old daughter Bristol – as far as we know – still lives at home and a much closer relationship between the child and the grandparents is a given.

Often, such grandparent cases try to paint a “poisonous” relationship to a child. However, in this case, the custody evaluation may focus on determining whether the grandparents are overly attached and become too controlling, which seems what Johnston is indicating: “Bristol listens to her mom. Sarah says something, Bristol is going to follow,” he told The Guardian.

Most states usually try to figure out a way that a parent remains the primary care giver and that both parents take precedence over the grandparents as far asparenting time is concerned. Many psychologists go a step further and suggest that grandparents should only step in if asked: Controlling grandparents can shake the parenting confidence of their children and create unnecessary tension. Typically, grandparents are expected to leave as much parenting responsibility to the biological parents as possible.

If we look at the current case and the fact that Sarah Palin and her lawyer do most of the talking in this case, it seems that that Johnston has at least a foundation to launch his claims from.

It will be interesting to see how the Johnston-vs.-Palin case will work out, if Sarah Palin in fact will be risking a court battle that may interfere with a presidential campaign in 2012.

http://www.singleparentgossip.com/986/child-custody/sarah-palin-accused-of-alienating-grandson/

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November 3, 2009 Posted Under: Parental Alienation in the News   Read More

Parental Alienation In the News

Parental Alienation: A Mental Diagnosis?

Some experts say the extreme hatred some kids feel toward a parent in a divorce is a mental illness

Posted October 29, 2009

pa-hurts-2

From an early age, Anne was taught by her mother to fear her father. Behind his back, her mom warned that he was an unpredictable and dangerous; any time he’d invite her to do anything—a walk in the woods, a trip to the art store—she would craft an excuse not to go. “I was under the impression that he was crazy, that at any moment he could just pop and do something violent to hurt me,” says Anne, who prefers that only her middle name be used to guard her family’s privacy. Typical of a phenomenon some mental-health experts now label “parental alienation,” her view of him became so negative, she says, that her mother persuaded her to lie during a custody hearing when the couple divorced. Then 14, she told the judge that her dad was physically abusive. Was he? “No,” she says. “But I was convinced that he would [be].” After her mother won custody, Anne all but severed contact with her father for years.

 

If a growing faction of the mental-health community has its way, Anne’s experience will one day soon be an actual diagnosis. The concept of parental alienation, which is highly controversial, is being described as one in which children strongly attach to one parent and reject the other in the false belief that he or she is bad or dangerous. “It’s heartbreaking,” says William Bernet, a child and adolescent psychiatrist and professor at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, “to have your 10-year-old suddenly, in a matter of weeks, go from loving you and hiking with you…to saying you’re a horrible, ugly person.” These aren’t kids who simply prefer one parent over the other, he says. That’s normal. These kids doggedly resist contact with a parent, sometimes permanently, out of an irrational hate or fear.

Bernet is leading an effort to add “parental alienation” to the next edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the American Psychiatric Association’s “bible” of diagnoses, scheduled for 2012. He and some 50 contributing authors from 10 countries will make their case in the American Journal of Family Therapy early next year. Inclusion, says Bernet, would spur insurance coverage, stimulate more systematic research, lend credence to a charge of parental alienation in court, and raise the odds that children would get timely treatment.

But many experts balk at labeling the phenomenon an official disorder. “I really get concerned about spreading the definition of mental illness too wide,” says Elissa Benedek, a child and adolescent psychiatrist in Ann Arbor, Mich., and a past president of the APA. There’s no question in her mind that kids become alienated from a loving parent in many divorces with little or no justification, and she’s seen plenty of kids kick and scream all the way to the car when visitation is enforced. But, she says, “this is not a mentally ill child.”

The phenomenon has been described for many decades, but it became a cause célèbre in 1985, when Richard Gardner, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, coined the term “parental alienation syndrome.” As more dads fought fiercely for joint custody, he observed a surge in the number of children suffering from a distinct cluster of symptoms, including a “campaign of denigration” against one parent that sometimes included a false sex-abuse accusation and automatic parroting of the other parent’s views.

But sound research supporting a medical label is scant, critics say. The American Psychological Association has issued a statement that “there is no evidence within the psychological literature of a diagnosable parental alienation syndrome.” What’s more, concern has grown that “PAS” could be invoked by an abusive parent to gain rights to a child who has good reason to refuse contact, says Janet Johnston, a clinical sociologist and justice studies professor at San Jose State University who has studied parental alienation. In teens, she notes, parental rejection might be a developmentally normal response. Anecdotal reports have surfaced that some kids labeled as “alienated” have become suicidal when courts have ordered a change of custody to the “hated” parent, she says.

In any case, divorcing parents should be aware that hostilities may seriously harm the kids. Sometimes manipulation is blatant, as with parents who conceal phone calls, gifts, or letters, then use the “lack of contact” as proof that the other parent doesn’t love the child. Sometimes the influence is more subtle (“I’m sure nothing bad will happen to you at Mommy’s house”) or even unintentional (“I’ve put a cellphone in your suitcase. Call when everyone’s asleep to tell me you’re OK”). It’s important to shield kids from harmful communication, says Richard Warshak, a clinical professor of psychology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and author of Divorce Poison. If something potentially upsetting about an ex must be conveyed, he advises imagining how you would have handled the conversation while happily married; how would you have explained Mom’s depression, say?

“The long-term implications [of alienation] are pretty severe,” says Amy Baker, director of research at the Vincent J. Fontana Center forChild Protection in New York and a contributing author of Bernet’s proposal. In a study culminating in a 2007 book, Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome, she interviewed 40 “survivors” and found that many were depressed, guilt ridden, and filled with self-loathing. Kids develop identity through relationships with both theirparents, she says. When they are told one is no good, they believe, “I’m half no good.”

Now 23, divorced, and a parent herself, Anne has recognized only recently that she was manipulated, that her long-held view of her father isn’t accurate. They live 2,000 miles apart but now try to speak daily. “I’ve missed out on a great friendship with my dad,” she says. “It hurts.”

http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2009/10/29/parental-alienation-a-mental-diagnosis.html?PageNr=1


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November 2, 2009 Posted Under: Parental Alienation in the News   Read More

Non Custodial Mothers Day October 28

pa-hurts-2Today is Non Custodial Mothers Day. You will not find this on any calendar or even really talked about unless you are going through this yourself. This is a day that no one wants to celebrate but the facts are there are many parents that are ripped out of their child’s life.  I support both parents but I will say this all cases are unique.  In various cases where moms are non custodial it is not by choice but by force.  Abuse does happen in homes and some stories are fabricated but good mothers are losing their children to abusive spouses.

I understand all too well from my past that these situations happen. We are at a loss on how to overcome the pain and obstacles always in the way to reunification.  Today is not a day we want to celebrate but is a solid start to awareness.  You are not alone and many mothers are going through this. We were crushed on every side to get out of the relationship and then made out to be the “abuser”. 

In no way am I saying that this is truth in all cases and I support fathers as well, but I don’t support any abusive behavior. I always find it odd that we have feminists that are very detailed on their stance about abuse. I’m often in awe of their view that parental alienation does not exist, just because one case has a certain outcome does not mean every case is the same way. Today is a day to start a conversation with someone who does not know about alienation.  Just start with “Today is Non Custodial Mother’s Day”

I have written a poem that i would like to share

A Mom Without Her Children

Her children are the first thought
in the morning and the last thought before bed
She lives on the memories that are embed in her head
She smiles at the thought of their tiny fingers wrapped around her hand
The presious time they spent together
The time she thought would last forever
The questions come lurking in her mind
Did they think of me today or am I lost back in time
The day they were born was a gift from above
She has given them unconditional love
 
Time goes on she sits and she waits
for some sort of justice to take shape
she worries as a mother does everyday praying everything is ok
She worries about her childrens pain
Somedays the world makes her hold her head down in shame
 
She watches other mothers with their children
wishing to be with her own
hoping it’s not so far away that they are already grown
 by Chrissy Chrzanowski Copyright 2009

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October 28, 2009 Posted Under: Parental Alienation Support   Read More

Generational Abuse and Parental Alienation

pa-hurts-2Parental Alienation and other forms of abuse seem to be handed down to our children and their children, meaning that it is generational. If every person takes a look back at their own family tree they will most likely see a pattern that was carried from their family.  For most of us we are facing or know someone who is facing parental alienation.

In my own family generational abuse has been passed down to me and it was very difficult to break the cycle. This is not the legacy we want for our children or family.  There are many stages of emotion when we really look at all the aspects not often talked about. In many situations we are forced into positions to hand a negative legacy to our children. Parental Alienation is a form of abuse and shatters any form of meaningful parenting to the child.

Education is always a key resource to understanding the parenting issues and how parental alienation is allowed to permeate into the family. In my opinion many parents look at the basics of alienation and are still confused by the mental and physical components surrounding their current situations.  There is more to be learned that goes deeper into understanding our children and their interaction with the Alienating Parent and the Target Parent. The subject before you is a revelation into the foundation of the alienator and their behavior patterns.

Parental Alienation has many factors that lead up to the outcome we have seen in our families. In my future blogs I will take this subject to a new level and also reflect back into my experience of breaking this cycle of abuse. Below is an article that shares how the abuse is carried from the parent to the child. These behaviors conforming the child to be co dependant and form habits that are considered risk factors. This is a trait that is then carried down to their children and forms criteria for generational abuse.

http://www.envf.port.ac.uk/illustration/IMAGES/vlsh/codepend/cycle.htm

Multi-generational cycle of abuse

While the roots of codependence are in the childhood experiences of abuse, it is the shame core that perpetuates the disease from generation to generation. Whenever the shame core gives its message of being ‘less than’ to a person, that person is automatically thinking, feeling and behaving as a codependent. A shame attack envelopes a parent and results in abuse to a child thus inducing the parent’s shame into the child. That child grows up and has the same problems as the parent. So the shame-based parent creates a shame-based child who grows up and begets another child who is set up to be shame-based. And the process goes on and on. And to make matters more complex and serious, when a child has two shame-based parents, he or she gets a double load. I think that’s why succeeding generations are getting more and more anxious and stressed as they experience compounded symptoms of codependence.”

Facing Codependence. Pia Mellody with Andrea Wells Miller and J. Keith Miller.Harper Collins 1989.
cycle

The initial site created used the marshmallow metaphor explored during BA and was a small interactive site effectively animating the potential behaviour these marshmallows might express in their relation to one another, and particularly the effects of the boundaries each had in relation to the others. The underlying theme was ‘rejection – protection – projection’ the cyclical phenomenon of abusive relationships and tied to the idea of ‘those have most power to hurt us that we love’

There are other components in the patterns of abuse on the site above. I have included these issues as they pertain to abuse and parental alienation. Keep in mind while reading these studies that both genders can experience abuse. I have included the definition of the Double Bind Theory below,

  • A psychological impasse created when contradictory demands are made of an individual, such as a child or an employee, so that no matter which directive is followed, the response will be construed as incorrect.
  • A situation in which a person must choose between equally unsatisfactory alternatives; a punishing and inescapable dilemma.Core theories which help to explain and contextualise what is happening when relationships are abusive arise from research into dysfunctional communicational patterns in the family. The main areas for research into the phenomenon of domestic violence and the abuse of power, and attempts to find a description for what is happening within the abusive relationship have yielded primarily, for the author, the Double Bind theory.

The model for Double-Bind theory was formulated during the 1950’s and published in 1956 as, ‘Toward a Theory of Schizophrenia’, by the anthropologist Gregory Bateson, Don Jackson, Jay Haley and John Weakland. The paper outlined a communicational theory on the origin and nature of schizophrenia and was based, as stated in the introduction, upon their research into ‘formulating and testing a broad systemic view of the nature, etiology and therapy of schizophrenia.’

Sluzki and Ransom write of the double bind:
“Double Bind is one of the revolutionary ideas of the twentieth century. While the notion arose originally from efforts to understand a specific problem – the etiology of schizophrenia – its scope is much wider…(it) has equally enriched psychiatry, psychology, sociology, linguistics and other related fields within the vast domain of the behavioural sciences.”

But they continue with a warning:

“Over the years the logical beauty of the concept has created an illusion of concreteness: it gives the impression of being a handy notion that can be plugged into many different models. But this under standing has led to many intellectual dead ends.”

Haley later writes that although the paper highlighted schizophrenia, it was also an argument for studying levels of communication within a broader range of human activity. He cites psychotherapy, play, humour, ritual, poetry, fiction and hypnosis.

As a model for levels of communication I would propose that Double Bind theory would apply equally well to problems people have in their communication patterns within relationships which become abusive. It will remain to be seen whether the application of this theory will lead to an intellectual dead end when applied to this phenomenon, but I would hasten to add that when applied to the visual description already posed the theory could be used fortuitously.

Reflections upon the theory and further research into the model have been undertaken. In 1975 Gina Abeles wrote a doctoral dissertation reviewing the research to date and a paper, ‘Researching the Unresearchable: Experimentation on the Double Bind’, based upon that was published in 1976

“The Double Bind theory is about relationships, and what happens when important basic relationships are chronically subjected to invalidation through paradoxical interaction.”

Researching the Unresearchable: Experimentation on the Double Bind. Gina Abeles.
Double Bind. The Foundation of the Communicational Approach to the Family. p116.
Paradoxical interaction, or the expression of two mutually exclusive messages creates ambivalence brought about by choices being available about which either or all partners have mixed feelings. The inability for either or any party to extricate themselves from the situation is central to the continuation of relationships in which there is abuse.

“Such a relationship is ‘untenable’ and would ordinarily be abandoned by both parties…this is not, however, always possible; in such cases we must recognise a quality of dependence in the relationship which, as Weakland (1960) Bateson (1969) and Wynne (1969) have emphasised, is crucial. A child is dependent for his physical and emotional survival upon his relationship with his parents” Ibid P120

Continuing from the themes of double bind and mutual stuck togetherness (Bowen) there began to emerge the theme of duality and the dyadic. Power abuse and the poles of the extremes; inferiority vs superiority, tower-cower, strong weak, big small, consciousness and subconsciousness.

The double-bind theory itself originally formulated in dyadic terms. There was a binder and there was one who was bound, although the reciprocal nature of the bind was acknowledged. The theory implicitly isolated a unit comprising two communicators, with the focus of interest the characteristic type of exchange between them.

As a result, a number of articles qualifying the original double bind theory began to emerge. Weakland was the first to break out of the dyadic mold, with a 1960 essay, ‘The double-bind Hypothesis of Schizophrenia and Three Party Interaction,’ …In 1962 the authors of the original double-bind article offered a critique that downplayed the focus on individual behaviours or single sequences in favor of the theory’s emphasis on circular systems in interpersonal relations.”

Bateson’s contribution was to offer an analogy from game theory for a type of behaviour that had been noticed frequently in families of schizophrenics. No two people could relate without a third becoming involved. This phenomenon Bateson called ‘the infinite dance of shifting coalitions.’

Foundations of family therapy. A conceptual framework for systems change, Lynn Hoffman. Basic Books Inc. 1981
To demonstrate the interaction of three or more people in a double bind Bateson called upon game theory, examining behavioural processes in situations of conflict and where the parties cannot agree.

Game theory is a method for the study of decision making in situations of conflict. It deals with human processes in which the individual decision-unit is not in complete control of other decision-units entering into the environment. It is addressed to problems involving conflict, cooperation, or both, at many levels. The decision-unit may be an individual, a group, a formal or informal organisation, or a society. The stage may be set to reflect primarily political, psychological, sociological, economic or other aspects of human affairs….The essence of a’ game’ in this conflict is that it involves decision makers with different goals or objectives whose fates are intertwined.’
Game Theory and Related Approaches to Social Behaviour [(ed) Martin Shubik. Wiley, 1964]

The game metaphor, applied to interrelations and communicating, outlines a situation where two subjects with unhealthy boundaries (ie merged or competing) are interacting to win, to be right, (validated). – Unhealthy boundaries (of a codependent) being created by lack of validation or a feeling of being ‘less than’. So codependents playing the ‘game’ each have an interest to win. But in order for one to win the other has to lose, and in this analogy losing means being wrong (invalidated – ‘less than’) – and because there are incomplete boundaries there is no defence against the effect of losing the game. This, it appears, is in part what creates the schizophrenic. Complications occur in the game if more than two people are playing.

“Though the original double-bind described a two person arrangement, Bateson saw a way, through the game metaphor, to translate the concept into a particular kind of family organization. He argued that the untenable predicament of the schizophrenic could arise from having to participate in the interactional equivalent of Von Neumann’s game.

A robot would be insensitive to the fact that every reasonable solution he arrived at was immediately proven wrong. But human beings are not this insensitive. In fact, they have an inflexibility bestowed upon them by their greatest asset, their ability to learn – that is, their ability to acquire automatic responses to habitual problems.

Without this capacity, a person would be forever inventing solutions to each problem as if he were encountering it for the first time. This is why human beings have a commitment to the process of adaptation at the deeper level of habit. Bateson argued that in a system where adaptations are not allowed, as in Von Neumann’s unstable game, it is logical to assume that the individual involved will experience extreme disruption and pain. He will be caught in a perpetual sequence of double-binds, situations in which there is always a penalty for being right.”
Foundations of family therapy. A conceptual framework for systems change, Lynn Hoffman. Basic Books Inc. 1981

It seems viable to incorporate the notions of game theory and games into a visual language to promote healthy ways of relating, and not least because games are played for entertainment, they are fun.
A study of games for children has so far revealed a reflection of damaging values. Games still available and presumably still being played by children include Happy Families, illustrating an inaccurate and stereotyped family unit and way of life, Old Maid, again depicting fixed gender roles but where the emphasis is that men generally have the jobs, and such ‘playground games as ’stone, paper, scissors’ where there are cyclical power relations at play.

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September 30, 2009 Posted Under: Research and Studies on PA   Read More
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