Más contenido relacionado La actualidad más candente (20) Similar a Introduction to Parental Alienation (20) Introduction to Parental Alienation1. Parental Alienation and
Extreme Alignment
When Parents Break Children’s Loving Bonds
When Children choose the Other Parent
When the ‘Ex-Factor’ interferes
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What is Parental Alienation?
Parental Alienation
A set of processes and behaviours conducted and enacted by a parent to
deliberately and knowingly damage or sever the relationship between a child
and another parent with whom the child enjoyed a prior loving relationship
Alienating Behaviour and/or Hostile Aggressive Parenting
Various acts and omissions by a parent that damage the relationship between
the child and the other parent
Hostile-Aggressive Parenting (HAP) may cause parental alienation.
Alienating Processes
A related set of acts, omissions and behaviours that together act as a system
or a process, the outcome of which is a particular alienating outcome or effect
upon the child
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5 Main Parental Alienation Strategies
Manipulating the
child to reject the
target parent
Demoting and
devaluing the
rejected parent’s role
in the child’s life
Sabotaging time
the child spends
with the target
parent
Displaced
anger, hurt
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7 Stages to Alienating a Child
Create a Loyalty ConflictStage 3
Force the Child to align strongly with
one parent against the other
Force The Child to
Resolve the Conflict
Manipulate the child to turn away from
the formerly loved parent
Stage 4
Create the Alienating EnvironmentStage 1
Discount the role of the other parent
Use isolation, conflict and power
Convince the Child to Contrary ‘Truth’Denigrate the target parent Stage 2
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7 Stages to Alienating a Child
The status quo for Legal, Social and Financial Services Stage 7 Enforce
Severance
Sever the Previously
Loving RelationshipStage 6Make the child unhappy and unwilling to be with
the target parent
Alienate the ChildStage 5Support the child to engage in irrational,
unfounded, exaggerated criticisms of the
rejected parent
When parents
often seek
help
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A Child or Children may be Alienated
Against a Parent if:
Hatred by association-enmity towards the target parent’s extended family without
known reason
No ambivalence
Uses adult concepts beyond age and stage of understanding
Parrots (a ‘mantra’) the favoured alienating parent without regard for their own
historical experience with the target parent
The child asserts that their views have been independently formed but are unable
to explain or show evidence of how they came to such beliefs
Refuses to spend time with visits or communicate with the rejected parent without
rational explanation
Fixed negative beliefs about the rejected parent based upon past events that
would not ordinarily be warranted
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Help Alienated Parents-Counter Measures :
Expose the alienating pattern
Be STRATEGICALLY EMPATHETIC and EMPATHETICALLY STRATEGIC!
Timing-wait until children are receptive
Educate them about alienation processes and about the range of
countermeasures available to them
Attempt to work constructively and strategically with the alienating parent-“Know
your enemy”
Tailor the approach for the type of person
Know when NOT to deal with the alienating parent-obsessive
Take the HIGH ROAD
“The best revenge is to be unlike him who
performed the injury. “-Marcus Aurelius
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8. References and Resources
Dialogue-In-Growth-Mens Action in Open
Thinking
W: www.dialogueingrowth.com.au
E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413
SpeakEASY Counselling and
Psychotherapy
W: www.speakeasycounselling.com.au
E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413
Other support groups & resources
An Example of Parental Alienation AKA Extreme
Alignment-
http://www.familylawwebguide.com.au/spca/pg/news/
view/614/index.php&wide_print=1&max=1000
Parental Alienation CENTRAL (Australia)-
http://bringingpeace2alienatedchildren.blogspot.com/
Poison Parents-
http://www.parentalalienationcrisis.org/index.asp?pag
eid=64961
Divorce Poison and Parental Alienation-
http://www.divorcepoison.com/
Parental Alienation Programme 'Family Bridges' and
Blog-http://www.warshak.com/alienation/pluto-dvd-
2.html
Hostile Aggressive Parenting and Parental Alienation-
http://www.hostile-aggressive-parenting.com/
Parental Alienation-UK resources-http://www.parental-
alienation.info/
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References and Resources
Baker, A. J. L. (2007). Adult children of parental alienation syndrome: breaking the ties that bind. New York:
W.W Norton & Co.
Gardner, R. (1987). Parental alienation syndrome and the differentiation between fabricated and genuine
sexual abuse. New Jersey: Creskill, Creative Therapeutics.
Gardner, R. (1989). Family evaluation in child custody, mediation, arbitration and litigation. New Jersey:
Creskill, Creative Therapeutics.
Gardner, R. A. (2004). Commentary on Kelly and Johnston's "The Alienated Child: A reformulation of parental
alienation syndrome.". Family Court Review Vol 42(4) Oct 2004, 611-621.
Johnston, J. R., & Kelly, J. B. (2004). Rejoinder to Gardner's "Commentary on Kelly and Johnston's 'The
Alienated Child: A reformulation of parental alienation syndrome.'". Family Court Review Vol 42(4) Oct 2004,
622-628.
Kelly, J. B., & Johnston, J. R. (2001). The Alienated Child: a Reformulation of Parental Alienation Syndrome.
Family Court Review, 39(3), 249-266.
Lowenstein, L. F. (1998). PARENT ALIENATION SYNDROME: A TWO STEP APPROACH TOWARD A
SOLUTION. Contemporary Family Therapy: An International Journal December, 20(4), 505-520.
Lowenstein, L. F. (2007). Parental Alienation: How to understand and address parental alienation resulting
from acrimonious divorce or separation. London: Russell House Publishing.
Lund, M. (1995). A Therapist's View of Parental Alienation Syndrome. Family and Conciliation Courts Review,
33(3), 308-316.
McIntosh, J. (2003). Enduring Conflict in Parental Separation: Pathways of Impact on Child Development.
Journal of Family Studies, Vol. 9(1), 63-80.
Warshak, D. R. A. (2010). Divorce Poison: How to Protect Youir Family from Bad-mouthing and
Brainwashing. New York: Harper Collins.
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NSW, Australia with permission from D.I.G
Pty. Ltd August 2011 9
Notas del editor SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
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SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
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T: 0414 888 413
Denigrating and de-valuing the target parent
To the child or in the child’s presence/indirectlyImpose lies, and inaccuraciesSelective attention onto minor flawsConfiding adult only informationFirst name basis
Sabotaging time the child spends with the target parent
Withholding or destroying gifts and letters from the alienated parent to the childInterfering with, monitoring or intercepting communications
Interfering with personal time
scheduling competing activities
excessively making contact with the child whilst in the company of the alienated parent
Pretexts, changing pickup drop-off locations and times
Destroying and undermining memories and relationships
Sanctioning the child’s reference to the alienated parent or to referring to photographs or lettersDestroying evidence of previously happy relationships between the child and the alienated parentInvolving the alienated child to spy on or keep secrets from the rejected parentInvolving the alienated child in a loyalty conflict, forcing them to choose between parentsProvoking conflict between the child and the alienated parentInterrogating child about the time with the alienated parentIndoctrinating the child about adult issues beyond the age or stage of understanding
Financial, often child-support
Relational, separation and divorce
SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
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E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413
SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
W: www.speakeasycounselling.com.au
E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413
SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
W: www.speakeasycounselling.com.au
E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413
SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
W: www.speakeasycounselling.com.au
E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413
SpeakEASY Counselling and Psychotherapy
W: www.speakeasycounselling.com.au
E: info@dialogueingrowth.com.au
T: 0414 888 413