Parental
Alienation Syndrome: the secret killer of parent-child relationships
By Jeff Opperman, For Counseling Today
|
Jeff Opperman is a writer
living in It is published here with the special consent of the author and Counseling Today. Editor’s note: This is the first of a two-part series on Parental Alienation Syndrome. NCHR's comments: Although this article focuses on how one parent
can deliberately sabotage previous loving relationships between a child and
the parent with whom he/she no longer lives it is published on the NCHR's web
site because it is applicable and has full relevance for cases where children
are taken into public care and placed in foster homes. The social-workers,
the foster parents and the courts can be identified as the alienators. |
Imagine a week where you filed for divorce, were arrested and falsely accused
of child abuse. Also imagine that you walked into a clinic with all the
symptoms of a heart attack. Then consider those events the high points of your
week.
What could be worse than divorce, arrest, child abuse charges and heart attack
symptoms? How about losing a child? Only your child didn't die. He or she is
alive, well and living a few miles away. Despite a normal, healthy, loving
relationship with your child just weeks or even days before, your child
professes to hate you; refuses to see you or talk with you. Welcome to the
world of Parental Alienation Syndrome.
The concept of PAS is pretty simple - one parent deliberately damages, and in
some cases destroys, the previously healthy, loving relationship between his or
her child and the child's other parent. In a severe PAS case, the alienating
parent and child work together to successfully eliminate the previously loved
mom or dad from the child's life.
Richard A. Gardner, a private practitioner and attending psychiatrist at
Divorce and mental health professionals agree that unless one parent is found
to be unfit, both parents should participate equally in the child's
post-divorce upbringing in order to ensure the child's normal, healthy
emotional growth and development. Yet an alienating parent inevitably acts in
ways that damage a child's relationship with the other parent. Unresolved
psychological and emotional issues are at the foundation of the alienating
parent's behavior. These issues may lie dormant for years, but the stress of
divorce makes the alienating parent symptomatic.
"The key factor that is characteristic in all PAS families is the
alienating parent's real or perceived fear of abandonment," said David
Israel, a
A person on the verge of divorce who fears abandonment can't tolerate the
thought of being alone. Once the divorce becomes real, the individual's dormant
feelings of loss and hurt begin to surface. This person will do anything to
keep these old feelings away - even take a child as an emotional hostage.
"The parent makes the child so dependent on him or her for the child's
needs, the child feels a big responsibility to take care of the parent,"
In the most severe PAS cases the alienating parent and child form an unhealthy
emotional alliance in an attempt to cut the other parent out of the child's
life. In order to justify their positions, the alienating parent and child
embark on a relentless campaign of denigration against the other parent. Their
campaign is aimed at destroying mom or dad's position as a loving parent and
responsible adult. In an effort to gain support for their position from family,
friends and professionals involved in the case, the alienating parent and child
often falsely and maliciously accuse the other parent of alcohol or substance
abuse, or worse, sexual or physical child abuse.
"False physical or sexual abuse charges are standard operating procedure
in severe PAS cases," according to
"Allegations of abuse or neglect are often leveled against the
non-custodial parent during a divorce as a way for the custodial parent to gain
some leverage," said Brian Canfield, president of the International
Association of Marriage and Family Counselors. "The longer that parent can
limit the contact the child has with the non-custodial parent, the bigger the
advantage."
An alienating parent quickly recognizes that time is best advantage against the
targeted parent. Absence does not make the alienated child's heart grow fonder.
"The alienating parent will make sure the child only hears negative
references to the previously loved mom or dad,"
The slow-turning wheels of justice are an alienating parent's unwitting accomplices.
Family court is an institution that has more legal disputes than there are
courtrooms to hold them. On the judge's daily docket, cases stack up like cords
of firewood. Judges encourage divorcing couples to work out their difference on
their own. The courts even have special counselors and mediators to help
couples settle their differences. Judges think nothing of granting multiple
continuances in order for the parties to reach an agreement. This approach may
work when couples are fighting over bank accounts and personal property, but
not in PAS cases. An alienating parent isn't interested in reaching any kind of
agreement that would allow the other parent back in the child's life. So
together with an attorney, the alienating parent delays the proceedings,
ignores court counselors' suggestions and court orders that could potentially
repair the damaged parent/child relationship. If the targeted parent has the
money to keep fighting for his or her child, the case inevitably ends up back
in the judge's lap.
In today's courtrooms, judges are unlikely to spend the time it takes to really
understand PAS - even when listening to testimony from court-appointed
psychologists or expert witnesses. Many judges believe they've seen it all and
heard it all. And the truth is many judges have seen alienating behavior
before. Recognizing the symptoms is easy. Just like doctors in the 1970s
recognized flu-like symptoms - fever, headaches, nausea and vomiting - without
understanding that their patient was HIV-positive, many judges recognize PAS
symptoms without understanding what drives the alienating parent and child's
behavior.
"Parental Alienation Syndrome is a relatively new term,"
"As therapists we must incorporate an awareness of PAS into our training
programs," Canfield added. "Mental health professionals must
understand this dynamic so when we are called upon to play a role in child
custody cases, we can educate parents, attorneys and judges."
Without understanding PAS, many judges consider PAS symptoms as nothing more
than a combination of two embattled spouses with an axe to grind and bad
parenting. They hold the view that the best place to address PAS is in a
therapist's office and not a courtroom. They're right. But what most judges
typically don't understand is that getting everyone to cooperate with the
therapist in a timely fashion is the judge's job. They're the only persons with
the power to put the alienated child in the counselor's office.
"Many judges don't punish the alienating parent for disobeying court
orders aimed at repairing the other parent's relationship with the child,"
said Bonnie Amendola, an attorney specializing in family law and an advocate
for children during the divorce and custody process. "There are no teeth
in most court orders."
Why not? Judges are reluctant to impose any punishment on the parent that might
cause the child any more pain. If a judge takes any money out of the alienating
parent's pocket, that's money that the parent theoretically might have needed
to support the child. If a judge places the alienating parent in jail, even for
a few hours, he or she runs the risk of further upsetting an emotionally
troubled youngster already traumatized over the breakdown of his or her family.
Award custody of the child to the targeted parent and remove the child from the
only place the child considers "home"? Don't count on it.
Judges rarely take such draconian measures.
Some judges do understand that draconian measures are necessary in severe PAS
cases. Last September, a judge in
Last August, a judge in
Why? The judge said the guidelines weren't the answer. Her Honor said she was
particularly upset that the mother falsely accused the father of sexually
molesting their daughter and had lied repeatedly in court.
Around the same time, a judge in
"Judges are only part of the problem," Amendola said. "The
bigger problem is that the adversarial system, our system, of justice enhances
PAS. The ongoing legal conflict is the biggest part of the alienated child's
problem."
Approximately 20 million children are victims of PAS. With one of every two
marriages ending in divorce, another 25 million children will face some form of
PAS. PAS victimizes children and families. Understanding PAS and how to address
it is critical if children of divorce are to enjoy the emotional benefits of
loving, healthy, relationships with both parents and their extended families;
and grow up with the ability to form loving, stable relationships with other
adults.
Jeff Opperman can be reached at: HugstoHeartbreak@aol.com
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