Parental
Alienation Syndrome (PAS): Its Causes, Cures, Costs, and Controversies
by Jayne A. Major, Ph.D.
Introduction
In no other area of family law do people become more
polarized than in cases involving parental alienation (PA) and parental alienation
syndrome (PAS). And though volumes have been written on this subject, there still exists
enormous confusion as to what the real problem is. Because there is rarely enough accurate
information to make an informed opinion, most bystanders as well as trained professionals
eventually give up trying to figure out which parent in a high-conflict family is
"right." The "he said/she said" quagmire is simply too shaky a place
from which to sort out the truth.
In high-conflict families, one or both parents may be
guilty of allowing their anger toward the other parent to be expressed in a way that
tragically involves their children. Parental alienation (PA) is the term used to
describe the attempts by one parent to undermine the relationship a child has with the
other parent. Because children are suggestible, many will eventually succumb to the
relentless programming or "brainwashing" by an alienating parent toward a target
parent. When a child aligns with a disturbed parent and becomes a representative of that
parents agenda by also behaving in aggressive and hateful ways toward the target
parent, parental alienation syndrome (PAS) has developed. A child with PAS becomes
an alienator in their own right, independently creating their own scenarios of how
horrible the target parent is. These imagined scenarios are often bizarre and bear little
resemblance to the truth.
My purpose in writing this article is to share the
knowledge I have gained firsthand working as a practitioner with such high-conflict
families and to provide a more in-depth understanding of this very serious issue, in
particular by offering insight into the causes of PA/PAS, its severe costs, and the
controversies that surround it. As you will see, the fallout from PA/PAS is far-reaching.
A tremendous amount of community resources are used trying to stabilize these
high-conflict families. My focus, therefore, is on the top 15% of chronically litigating
parents, as they use an inordinate amount of court time to try to resolve their family
issues and are most likely to 1) force their children to take sides with them and 2)
obstruct shared custody and mutual decision-making.
Causes of PA/PAS
There are three degrees of PA that can result in PAS.
A mild and very common form of parental alienation
is when one parent speaks negatively about the other parent, over what might be the
smallest of issues, so that a child hears what is being said. This can be somewhat
unintentional. Parents may be so upset at each other that they simply dont realize
that they are inappropriately involving a child in adult affairs. Parent education is
often needed to teach these parents to have boundaries that protect their children from
upsetting feelings. Without such boundaries, parents are contributing to the psychological
insecurity of their children.
In the moderate category of parental alienation
are conflicting parents who exercise little control over their anger and go ballistic when
they are upset, without any consideration of how their anger affects other family members.
The suffering that this ugly behavior causes children and the target parent is severe.
Many parents look to the court to stabilize what is a chaotic family system. These are
families where there is little ability to use mediation to work out a reasonable parenting
plan for their children. But using a court to resolve high-conflict family disputes such
as where PA/PAS is present has had limited success at best. The outcome depends almost
entirely upon a judges ability to understand the nuances of PA/PAS and to make
appropriate orders to contain the problemnot an easy thing to do.
In this category, PAS develops as children find the need
to protect the angry, alienating parent. To avoid further triggering the parents
rage, they stop expressing positive feelings for the target parent. They become caught in
a vicious cycle of trying to figure out how to be safe while also sorting through the
demonizing attacks made toward the target parent.
Falling into the severe category of parental
alienation are those parents who become obsessed with destroying the childs
relationship with the other parent and that parents family and friends. Dr. Frank
Williams describes this goal of cutting a parent out of a childs life as a
"parentectomy." In these cases, a child will succumb to the alienators
programming or brainwashing and experience fear, anger, and hatred toward the target
parent. When parental alienation is severe enough, children have no choice but to align
with the disturbed parent against the target parent, thus destroying their relationship
with the target parent. These children no longer have free will or the ability to continue
loving the target parent. PAS describes the childs behavior in response to
the brainwashing that has occurred; it does not describe actions on the part of a parent.
The focus of this article in on children who are being severely alienated or who are
already experiencing PAS.
How can obsessed parents be effective in erasing a
childs love for a parent who showed the child only love and not abuse? In her book Adult
Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome: Breaking the Ties that Bind, Dr. Amy J. L.
Baker provides solid qualitative research using 40 adults who experienced PAS as children.
The subjects of the study reported five primary mechanisms that were used to manipulate
their thoughts and feelings as children:
(1) relentless bad-mouthing of the character of the
target parent, in order to reduce their importance and value
(2) creating the impression that the target parent was
dangerous and planned to hurt the child, in order to instill fear and rejection of that
parent
(3) deceiving children about the target parents
feelings for them, in order to create hurt, resentment, and psychological distance
(4) withdrawing love if the child indicated affection or
positive regard for the target parent, in order to heighten the need to please the
alienating parent
(5) erasing the other parent from the life and mind of
the child through minimizing actual and symbolic contact (Baker 2007)
The outrageous behavior by the disturbed parent is often
so shocking that people dont want to believe it. Their dramatic justifications for
their aberrant behaviors defy reason.
Few people understand the psychological underpinnings of
PA and why a parent would treat a child so badly. Gregory Lester, Ph.D., describes
possible causes that can account for the severity of the psychological disturbance seen in
severely alienating parents. They demonstrate egocentricity to a fault and exhibit
bullying behavior. He suggests that their brain may be partially wired. He describes them
as assuming that they are entitled to special treatment and expect others to take care of
them, including their children. They dont engage in the normal give and take that is
customary in social relationships. They are takers, not givers. If they give something,
the gift is likely to have strings attached. They talk a fine game, but they dont
deliver.
Drama replaces reason. Individuals with these problems do
not solve problems by being rational, but rather by escalating ordinary events into
dramatic episodes. They have exaggerated mood swings. A person once revered and respected
can suddenly become an object of hatred and contempt. This black-and-white, highly
polarized thinking is called "splitting and is typical of these types of
personalities. They are unpredictableone day loving and cooperative, and the next
attacking ferociously. They have no internal conflict, because they truly believe they are
right. Like Teflon, nothing sticks to them. If a problem arises, it is always someone
elses fault. People comment, "How can they lie like that? How are they able to
justify in their own mind any behavior, no matter how excessive?" This is because
they are able to make up the truth to suit themselves and then passionately believe the
story they made up. They can be very convincing because they themselves are convinced!
They are masters at projection, the strategy that refers
to when another persons feelings, thoughts, and behaviors are reversed and used to
describe the person making the complaint. For example, in Sharons declaration she
described Jacks irresponsible behavior. Jacks declaration came back with
exactly the same allegations about Sharon. Now Sharon has to defend herself about being
abusive, neglectful, and out of control. Jack managed to level the playing field by using
projection. Individuals using these tactics do not seem to have an observing ego or
consciousness to witness their own mistakes. Therefore, if something is wrong it must be
the other persons fault. In our example, the fact that Jack has no evidence that
Sharon behaves the way he does is irrelevant to him.
Often people who exhibit this level of nastiness have
come from a disastrously dysfunctional family or have experienced a serious trauma that
went untreated. They are unreasonably demanding and resist any discussion or negotiation
to make a situation better. They must have their way and are rigid about expecting others
to comply with what they want. (Gregory Lester, 2002)
Our court processes are based on the assumption that
individuals are law-abiding citizens. However, these abusive people believe that rules and
laws apply to other people, but not to them. If they dont agree with a judicial
decision, they are likely to see a court order as a recommendation and not something they
must obey. Actually, these disturbed parents are like little children who havent
reached the age of reason; however, they do respond to rewards and punishment. Sadly,
their excessive behavior is constantly rewarded by the way our family law courts are
structured. Unfortunately, PA/PAS cases can be stalled for months, even years, with no
resolution. This is rewarding to them and easily used to their advantage to advance
alienation in their children. Seldom in family law court are sanctions of fines, jail
time, or community service applied to individuals for contempt of court orders.
Can PAS Be Cured?
It is safe to say that the average person is utterly
perplexed about how to react to such aberrant behavior on the part of the alienating
parent. They quickly run out of techniques that would work with a rational person.
Furthermore, because so little is known about PA/PAS, target parents often do not even
know that there is a name for their childs increasingly hostile behavior.
Unfortunately, this is also true of many therapists who are called upon to help families
in crisis. Without a proper understanding of PA/PAS, it is easy to take sides and even
provide evidence that the truly abusive person is a wonderful parent. Many therapists are
not able to discern if what they are being told is true. Few psychologists understand
rules of evidence used in family law courts or are trained in how to work with cases as
difficult as these.
In exasperation, target parents often want to
"cure" the toxic parent with medication or therapy. The problem with medication
as a solution is that it is very difficult to get another person to take it consistently.
After all, in their mind, there isnt anything wrong with them. In fact, the
suggestion that they need medication is more likely to be turned on whoever is suggesting
it! For example, Jerry said that the raging mother of their son was guided to take
psychotropic medication by her family. When she had stabilized, she was profusely
apologetic to Jerry for her outrageous behavior. She thanked him for being such a good
father and said that they would have no trouble with joint custody. Only three months of
peace went by before she decided that she was all better and stopped taking the
medication. She quickly deteriorated, becoming more vicious than she had been before.
What about therapy? Surely a therapist can fix them!
Individuals who will brainwash a child are the worst candidates for therapy, because
therapy implies that a person realizes that there is something wrong with them and that
they are motivated to do something about it. These people do not have the ability to
self-correct behavioral or emotional errors. The wiring of their brain will not permit it.
Therapy doesnt work because one cant have a conversation about the
problem when the problem is doing the answering! As soon as a therapist suggests
that they behave better or that what they are doing is harming their child, splitting
occurs. The therapist then becomes the bad guy and the parent leaves, taking the child
with them. They do not form trusting relationships with others unless they believe that
they are getting their way.
Therapy can, in fact, make these troubled individuals
worse. Since they do not feel moral emotions of empathy, sympathy, or compassion, the
therapist may unwittingly teach compassionate gestures and language that their client can
use to more effectively manipulate people. They are most likely to be a warm body sitting
in a chair for the required number of times; they may even be patronizing about how the
therapist is saving their life. However, the end result is that they are unfazed by the
efforts to make them healthier.
In spite of what they say, they are unable to act in the
best interests of their child. It takes a truly disturbed and obsessed person to harm a
child by brainwashing them, to remove from a childs life a loving parent and their
extended family and friends who care deeply about the child. The programming of a child is
done for personal gain. These are not people with good parenting skills. Children are in
their lives to serve them and to help them get their way. They are not nurturing and
attentive to their childs needs, nor do they know how to nurture their child
emotionally. A child is not allowed to grieve for the loss of the target parent, extended
family, and friends; they are kept busy taking care of the disturbed parent.
In family law procedures, we rely heavily on evaluators
to assess the psychological underpinnings of a family. However, it is rare in
psychological evaluations to see a specific diagnosis regarding the disturbed
parents mental health. You might see a comment that there was an elevation in
borderline, narcissism, or hysteria, but these labels are rarely used specifically. The
reason is that when different psychologists attempt to diagnose a disturbed person, they
are likely to arrive at different conclusions. Also, making a diagnosis is tricky, as
there are rarely clean-cut distinctions that can be made. Most disorders may also be
compounded by complications from drug abuse or alcoholism, post traumatic stress disorder,
situational hormonal fluctuations, or obsessive compulsive features. Furthermore, courts
rely on evidence, not labels.
However, one label is commonly used, although not
necessarily by evaluators. Because alienating parents are socially maladaptive and have no
moral conscience, they are called "sociopaths." Although they may know how to
act the part, they are unable to have empathy, sympathy, or compassion for others.
Unlike rational people, they do not distinguish between telling the truth and lying. Therefore,
they may not know when they are lying. They can get worse by becoming so obsessed that
they disassociate from reality and become psychoticexperiencing delusions and
hallucinations.
In spite of admonitions from judges and mental health
professionals to stop alienating, they cannot. One of the most difficult ideas for the
target parent to understand is that the mentally disturbed parent is unable to act
differently; nor can a child experiencing PAS act differently. The obsessed parent and
child are likely to be experiencing a shared psychosis. There is no protocol to fix the
alienating parentnot legally, not therapeutically, and not by reasoning with them.
It is also unlikely that they will ever stop trying to perpetuate the alienation, because it
has become a gut-wrenching survival issue to them! Douglas Darnall, a leading expert
in PAS, points out that we do not have a protocol to treat these people. (Douglas Darnell,
2000)
However, if a child can be isolated from the toxic
parent, there are protocols, developed by Dr. Richard Gardner, for reversing the
alienation. Others have also developed ways to reverse the programming. In one sense,
alienating parents have built a house of cards, as the child really wants to love both
parents. If the severe alienator is legally prevented from being able to poison their
minds, many children can be brought back with the right treatment; however, traditional
talk therapy has not proven to be helpful. The most effective procedure to date is what
has been used to deprogram individuals involved in cults. In some cases, though, it is
simply too late and unlikely that the child will ever understand what happened. (Richard
Gardner, 2001)
Of course, the significance of this result is that PA/PAS
is often inner-generational and, once grown, those damaged are at risk of passing the
problem on to their own children. These individuals are inclined to continue into
adulthood the practice of seeing people in black and white. They are likely to be
self-loathing, which creates horrific issues of low self-esteem. To compensate for how
badly they feel about themselves, they may desperately attempt to have others see them as
special and more important than other people. They have missed out on the social skills
they need to gain respect and to get their needs met without having to resort to
heavy-handed control and bullying.
Without legal intervention to limit an alienating
parents access to a child and to have the brainwashed child deprogrammed by a
specialist, it is unlikely that a child will ever recover from PAS. The tragedy is that
they have lost their free will and ability to make rational choices over their lives. They
are likely to experience serious psychiatric disorders, have poor social relationships,
and of course pass the problem on to their children. For a greater understanding of the
long-term impact of PA/PAS, I highly recommend Dr. Bakers book, listed in the
bibliography.
Costs of PAS
Consider the resources required by families afflicted
with PA/PAS. Seeing their once-loving relationship with their child eroding away, many
target parents will use all the financial resources they can muster to pay for legal
representation to try to preserve their relationship with their children. This is risky.
Mounting attorney fees, court evaluations, and multiple other costs involved in making the
case that they are a good parent and deserve to be in their childs life quickly
deplete financial reserves. Target parents are likely to borrow against credit cards,
siphon money from pension plans, liquidate the equity on a house, or ask extended family
to help pay for an escalating and increasingly expensive conflict. Declaring bankruptcy
and paying for these costs for years isnt uncommon. Even still, sadly, all too often
there is little to show for such an investment.
Additionally, target parents involved in these difficult
cases find that every minute of their spare time is spent preparing legal documents,
worrying about whether the next visitation with their child will occur, and managing
increasing frustration at not being able to resolve their problems. Trying to communicate
with the other parent to resolve issues that are vitally important to their child only
results in more stress. In these cases, joint custody simply does not work because one
parent refuses to negotiate or change their point of view.
Working parents involved in a high-conflict child custody
case find it hard to focus on the job. Court dates and family emergencies repeatedly cause
missed workdays. Employers carry a serious liability as their valued employee becomes less
able to meet deadlines, makes more errors, and increases the risk of accidents at the
workplace. Company profits can be deleteriously affected.
Furthermore, families experiencing PA/PAS consume an
enormous amount of community legal and mental health resources. Numerous calls may be
placed to the police. The department of social welfare is likely to become involved,
requiring an investigation of abuses to children. Therapists are called upon to stabilize
the family. Family law judges find their courtrooms repeatedly clogged with chronic
litigators.
No one can experience this level of stress and anxiety
without suffering serious mental health problems. This population is at high risk for post
traumatic stress disorder, depression, suicide, domestic violence, and homicide. Issues of
deteriorating physical health arise as stress takes its toll.
Children are likely to suffer academically as their
concentration is undermined. Their social relationships are compromised and they often
exhibit adjustment disorder. An interesting situation that occurs among many PAS children
is that while initially they struggle in school, many are likely to eventually excel
academically as well as in sports. One reason is that school and sports offer them logic
and stability, and through this, a way to escape the chaos at home. The childs
successes are likely to be seen as evidence that the disturbed and alienating parent is
doing a good job of parenting, when this is not the case.
Problems related to divorce will continue long after the
final decree is signed and the last court appearance is over. The psychological damage to
children and the target parent is unlikely to ever be reversed.
PA/PAS Controversies
Understanding the raging controversies surrounding
PA/PAS is extremely difficult. "Thinking" people dont have the advantage
of living with the certainty of seeing things as only black and white. Since rational
people arent sure what the truth is, they dont want to take sides until they
can decipher the facts. They will research an issue. They realize that people may be
solidly convinced of their opinions and that they present their opinions as facts.
Thinking people wait, investigate, and figure things out. They realize that they will have
to live in mystery until the facts are clear; whereas, for non-thinking people there is no
mystery, so real is their certainty.
Polarized, "win/lose" thinking is systemic to
our society. There are those who live with the certainty of right and wrongwhat is
true or false, black or white. People who think in absolutes can easily find others who
think as they do. Together they are able to reinforce each others beliefs and
present a united front about what they perceive as true. "Rigor mortis of the brain
cells" has been used to describe their stuck position. Their calcified thinking does
not allow them to be bothered with exceptions. The complex issues around PA/PAS invite
simplistic thinking. Many people seem to need someone else to do their thinking for them.
It is easy to jump on the bandwagon of highly charged issues such as preventing the sexual
molestation of children and ending domestic violence. Gender wars are common; one gender
sees the other as the enemy. The issue is about human rights, protecting not only
childrens rights, but also mothers and fathers rights. It is about being
fair and logical and letting reason, not drama, make appropriate decisions.
To understand current controversies that surround PA/PAS,
we need to go back to the 1980s, when a series of events greatly contributed to the
problems of today. In 1980, Jim Cook single-handedly lobbied the California legislature to
pass a law stating that there is a presumption of joint custody when parents divorce.
California became the leader in joint custody laws, and most of the other states followed
this lead. Prior to 1980, if there was a disagreement between mother and father about the
custody of their child, the mother retained sole legal custody and was allowed to make all
of the decisions, including whether her children would have a father in their life.
At the same time, with the rise of feminism in the 1960s,
rigid roles for men and women were breaking down. Women had more voice over their lives
and were attending college and entering the business world in increasing numbers. Most men
were doing some domestic chores and, of course, taking care of their children some of the
time. This meant tending to all of childrens needs, including changing
diapersa task once considered solely womens work. In many families, sharing
domestic duties became the order of the day. Most men gladly accepted some responsibility
for the care of their children. Computers had made their way into peoples homes, and
dads enjoyed working from home while tending to their children. In some families, women
became the primary breadwinner.
When parents divorced, many liked the idea that "the
best parent is both parents" and were able to share the decision-making and their
childrens time. However, with others the idea of shared custody didnt go over
so well. Some women thought that, as before, children should be their sole property. Even
though Dad had proven that he was fully capable of caring for his children, some moms
stated that he was only a babysitter. Fathers going to family law court to get shared
custody caused a burgeoning of family law cases. If a mother refused to share a child,
court was a fathers only opportunity to be involved in his childs life.
In 1983, a tragedy happened in Manhattan Beach,
California. Judy Johnson made an allegation that Ray Buckey, the 25-year-old son of Peggy
Buckey, who owned McMartin Preschool, had molested her 2½-year-old son. On September 7,
1983, Ray Buckey was arrested and sent to prison. After Police Chief Harry Kuhlmeyer
arrested Ray Buckey, he sent a letter to 200 McMartin Preschool parents informing them
that Ray Buckey was suspected of child abuse and asked them to question their children
about having experienced acts such as oral sex, sodomy, having their pictures taken while
naked, and being tied up. Chief Kuhlmeyer asked the parents to keep the letter strictly
confidential. His request for confidentiality exploded into headline news across the
country.
Ray Buckey was never charged, but he was held under the
suspicion that he had done heinous crimes against children. Everyone who worked at the
McMartin Preschool became suspect of bizarre and horrific acts against children. Judy
Johnsons reports of misbehavior became increasingly bizarre, claiming that
Rays mother was involved in satanic rituals and that horrible things had been done
with babies, animals, and sexual acts in front of the children who attended the preschool.
Nine months later, Judy Johnson died due to complications from alcoholism. She had also
been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. Day after day the public was bombarded with
details of bizarre allegations of what had happened to the children at the McMartin
Preschool. Mass hysteria had taken over.
All preschools become suspect. Workers were told to never
touch children, to have two people go to the bathroom with a child, to install glass doors
at the front of the building so anyone who wanted to could see in. Parents were allowed to
visit unannounced at any time to see what was going on. To make matters worse, Kee
McFarlane, a consultant at Childrens Institute International, interviewed children
at McMartin Preschool using anatomically correct dolls, leading questions, and rewards for
answers that they had been molested. She testified that 384 McMartin students had been
abused.
After two trials, no substantial evidence was found
against the owner or staff at McMartin Preschool, including Ray Buckey. Five years had
passed before Ray Buckey was allowed to leave prison, never having been charged with a
crime. The government spent $15 million investigating and prosecuting the case over a
seven-year period that involved two trials that led to no convictions. The fate of Ray
Buckley foreshadowed what was going to happen to many fathers fighting for shared custody
of their children.
What responsibility do journalists have to report the
truth? As in the case of the McMartin Preschool, the media engaged in "pack
journalism," slanting heavily toward the prosecution, which provided sensational
headlines day after day and almost never seriously questioned the allegations. Today, we
have a media that continues to focus on lurid and scary news involving children.
Politicians can easily exploit parents fears about the safety of their children,
implying that they are the law-and-order people who will protect their children.
Mark Foley was quoted in the Washington Times in 2005 as saying, "We need to
stand together and unite cities, communities, and states in the effort to stop the assault
on Americas children." What assault? Mark Foley, who is now a disgraced
congressman for his sexually inappropriate contact with high school pages, used this
rhetoric for personal political gain. He was exploiting parents worst fears about
the safety of their children. The problem with media reports of bad things that happen to
children is one of proportion. Bad things do happen to children. The media can easily whip
peoples emotions into a frenzy by exaggerating such events as happening more
frequently than is the case. The mass hysteria unleashed by Judy Johnson in 1983 is still
with us today.
The 1980s is a significant decade because of the
colliding of joint custody laws and the hysteria of the McMartin Preschool trial. Fathers
found that a mere allegation of being sexually inappropriate with a child was enough to
have him kicked out of his home. Countless fathers became childless as they tried to prove
what didnt happenwhat REALLY didnt happen.
In 1983, at the beginning of the McMartin Preschool
fiasco, there was a sharp rise in the number of reports of sexual molestation of children.
Suddenly, people were hyper-vigilant about the issue. Elaborate tests were developed to
determine whether a man had pedophilia tendencies and was likely to molest children. There
is still a belief by many that children dont lie about abuse. Kee McFarlane has been
widely criticized for leading children to the conclusions that she wanted to hear,
ultimately proving how suggestible children can be.
If a mother was driven to be vicious, the climate of
hysteria about the sexual molestation of children became a powerful tool to gain her ends.
All she had to do was say that she thought the father had molested their child. The
tragedy of this kind of parentectomy continues today.
In 1985, Dr. Richard Gardner first introduced a
phenomenon found in family law cases called parent alienation syndrome. He pointed out
that PA/PAS is related to highly litigious court cases where there is a win/lose
mentality. Ultimately, a desperate and obsessed parent could win in court by programming a
child to despise the other parent, resulting in a parentectomy, and there was little that
anyone could do about it. Dr. Gardner took on this difficulty, and he wrote volumes about
how to understand the complexities of these highly volatile cases. He was first to
identify the eight characteristics that PAS children display as a syndrome. He published
extensively on how to identify false allegations of sexual molestation. He also wrote the
book Therapeutic Interventions for Children with Parental Alienation Syndrome to
describe a protocol for deprogramming children. His contributions have been profound in
helping us understand PA/PAS. He has written and testified extensively about false
allegations of sexual abuse that had become common during this period. In this respect, he
was a pioneer. Those of us who had the good fortune to know Dr. Gardner, to hear his
lectures and read his books, are appreciative of his contributions. In addition to his
groundbreaking insights about PA/PAS, he had a long and illustrious career as a
psychiatrist specializing in children. (Richard Gardner, 2001)
Litigation over issues of parental alienation of children
became common in family law courtrooms. Initially, mothers had more time with children and
were the primary cause of PAS in children. A person who programs a child must have a lot
of time with that child in order to be effective in the programming. As disturbed,
narcissistic fathers gained more child custody, they proved to be just as capable of
initiating PAS. Soon, PAS became a hot issue in gender wars, especially when women began
losing legal custody of their children when a court ruled that they were guilty of
alienating a child against the father.
PA/PAS has been a tragic issue that has polarized men and
women. On one side, malicious mothers who often have legal precedent for primary child
custody on their side take children away from good fathers by alienating them. On the
other side are vicious fathers whose purpose is to take children away from good mothers.
Women have claimed that men are predators on women and children. Men are livid that they
have been so labeled and frequently accused of sexually molesting children. The frequency
of false allegations of child molestation against fathers has had a backlash from fathers
against mothers. Some mothers lost custody because the evidence showed that they were
coaching their child to participate in inappropriate behaviors toward the father. These
mothers are quick to respond that all a father has to do is say she is guilty of PA/PAS
and he will get custody of the child whom she was only trying to protect. It is also
claimed that fathers have been awarded primary legal custody when they have in fact been
guilty of domestic violence or have molested a child. This has created another backlash of
mothers wanting to get back at fathers. No matter who is doing the alienating, it is
terribly wrong. It isnt a gender issue, as both men and women are guilty of
initiating PAS in children. It is a human rights issue.
Weve already seen that parents who alienate can be
an angry, difficult group of people. When they go through a trial and a judge issues a
court order giving sole legal custody to the other parent and limiting physical access to
a child, these parents are not likely to roll over and passively obey. This leads to
chronic litigation, as no matter how convincing the evidence against them or what the
judges decision, they do not let go of the idea that they are right.
Unfortunately, angry, disgruntled women who are in fact
guilty of severe parental alienation have found a sympathetic ear in the domestic violence
community. Domestic violence groups have been successful in making domestic violence a
crime and thus reducing its frequency. In most states, it is against the law for men to
hit women, nor can women hit men without the possibility of being arrested. Interestingly,
it is still allowed that adults may hit children. Hitting children is also domestic
violence, but unfortunately, we havent progressed that far in our consciousness.
In an article in Newsweek, journalist Sara
Childress stated, "It is
hard to fathom how a judge could award custody to a
parent accused of abuse." Fortunately, the logic and rules of evidence that are
necessary to remove a child from a seriously psychologically disturbed parent are
extensive. Judges dont just wake up in a bad mood, disregard all evidence, and say,
"Let me take a child away from a good mother." This makes for good drama, but
not good logic. (Childress, Newsweek, October 2006)
The mendacity of non-thinking people creates a maelstrom
of trouble in sorting out what is true. Too many members of the domestic violence
community will assume that an accusation or allegation is true. Many do not understand the
standard of evidence that is needed to turn an allegation into proof. The irony is that
unthinking members of this community fan the flames of injustice and contribute to the
most unspeakable kinds of violence against children, that of PA/PAS. No innocent father,
or man such as Ray Buckley, should be recklessly accused of something he didnt do.
False allegations of sexual misconduct with children and the brainwashing of children
where PA/PAS occurs are the worst kinds of domestic violence. The irony is that the very
people who are against domestic violence contribute to it by denying the existence of
PA/PAS.
Unfortunately, Richard Gardner has been relentlessly
slandered, demonized, and dismissed as a pedophile by those who are threatened by his work
and by others who have never read his articles and books and have not taken the time to
realize that he was on the side of truth and justice in these complicated cases. This
aggressive behavior on the part of so many has contributed to the mass hysteria that has
done great damage to those parents and children who are impacted by PA/PAS.
There is no greater example of this hysteria than the
denunciation of "so-called" parental alienation syndrome in the declaration by
the National Organization of Women (NOW). See Appendix A. This declaration from NOW sums
up the arguments against the very existence of PA/PAS. Of course, there is no mention of
the unfairness of what happens to fathers, the need for a child to have a father, or the
very real problem of PAS in children. There is no mention of the countless numbers of
mothers who have been victimized by PA/PAS. The problem is not caused solely by one gender
against another. It is caused by very disturbed people who have to get their way at all
costs. Amazingly, the declaration claims that PA/PAS is non-existent! But anyone can use
ordinary observation to find repeated examples of its existence.
Current debate over whether the child has experienced a
"syndrome" has created a smokescreen that attempts to ignore the fact that
children are, in fact, being manipulated and brainwashed into such states of confusion
that their perception of events and people around them is severely distorted. It
doesnt matter what the tragedy is called; it is still a tragedy for children and the
target parent.
This is an example of making simple that which is very
complex with a maneuver of killing the messenger. Dr. Gardners contributions have
been taken out of context and twisted to imply that he encouraged inappropriate sexual
behavior. For example, he said that if a society has no social prohibition for molesting
children sexually, then sexual molestation is common. This has been translated as saying
it is okay to sexually molest children if no one says not to. The fabrications about Dr.
Gardner are so extensive that it is an example of brainwashing in itself. He is the
scapegoat for people who desperately need an enemy to blame. No group is more anti-Gardner
than are the domestic violence community and the National Organization for Women.
PAS is the result of terrible domestic violence toward
children and target parents. The irony is that those people whose stated purpose is to
prevent domestic violence contribute to it by putting the whole body of Dr. Gardners
work out for target practice, not for analysis. Those of us who appreciate and support
Gardners contribution and understand that PA/PAS is serious violence to children and
the target parent would never support awarding custody of a child to a pedophile or
aggressor. The domestic violence community and those who want PA/PAS stopped should be
rowing their respective boats in the same direction, instead of engaging in a bizarre
tug-of-war characterized by the black-and-white thinking of who is right and who is wrong.
Truth suffers. To take a childs free will and mind away is violence from which they
are likely never to recover.
The leadership in womens groups has a
responsibility to come to terms with the injustice of this slander of Gardner, and realize
that their organization attracts disgruntled women who can easily find a sympathetic ear
for how they were victimized by the father of their child and the court system. Just
because someone has a dramatic story to tell doesnt mean that they are telling the
truth. The domestic violence leaders need to bring logic and reason to these issues.
Unfortunately, their efforts against any recognition of
PA/PAS are relentless. They lobby for laws that would prevent PA/PAS from being used in
family law court as a justification for modifying custody. They have successfully
influenced the publishers of the 2006 edition of Navigating Custody and Visitation
Evaluations in Cases with Domestic Violence: A Judges Guidea publication
of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judgesto include
anti-PA/PAS information. To the undiscerning eye, information published in such a
prestigious document must be true. This is most unfortunate and tragic for the families
impacted by these issues. (National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, 2006)
Both sides of the debate have stated that their mission
is the sameto protect people from the excesses of violent, disturbed individuals.
Unfortunately, much of the domestic violence community focuses only on violence
perpetrated by men, rather than also including the violence perpetrated by women against
fathers and children. Violence is wrong, no matter who is committing it. The result is
that domestic violence has been turned into a gender issue, when the truth is that both
men and women are capable of doing serious damage to their children and to each other.
Conclusion
It is unfortunate that too many people will believe a
dramatic story more than they will listen to evidence. Drama is the hallmark of people who
are psychologically disturbed. Individuals with these severe mental health issues are
under-diagnosed. We need more research and clarity on the effects of PA/PAS. The costs are
staggering to children, the target parent, and that persons family. The damage is
severe and has long-reaching effects.
The whole fabric of our society is undermined by the
behaviors of these severely disturbed individuals. Both men and women with obsessed
thinking create PA/PAS situations with children and their target parent. Their
irresponsible behaviors siphon off a staggering amount of social resources to stabilize
the chaos they create. Any protocol that we use for the regular population is woefully
inadequate in making them normal. Every year, hundreds of thousands of children and
parents are experiencing the phenomenon of PA/PAS and the resulting devastation it causes.
Millions of people are ending up damaged because, up to now, we have not even recognized
the phenomenon or truly considered its impact. We all need to take action to educate and
help people who have this terrible problem that does such severe damage to children.
Bibliography
- Baker, Amy, R. L. Adult Children of Parental
Alienation: Breaking the Ties that Bind. W.W. Norton, 2007.
- Darnall, Douglas. Divorce Casualties: Protecting Your
Children from Parental Alienation. Taylor Trade Publishing, 1998.
- Lester, W. Gregory. Personality Disorders in Social
Work and Health Care, Third Edition. Cross Country University, 2002.
- "Fighting Over the Kids: Battered spouses take aim at
a controversial custody strategy." Newsweek, September 26, 2006.
- Linder, Douglas. "The McMartin Preschool Abuse Trial:
A Commentary 2003 Internet."
- Gardner, R. A. The Parental Alienation Syndrome, 2nd
ed. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc., 1998.
- Gardner, R. A. Therapeutic Interventions for Children
with Parental Alienation Syndrome. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.,
2001.
- Williams, Frank. "Preventing Parentectomy Following
Divorce," Keynote address, Fifth Annual Conference, National Council for
Childrens Rights, Washington, D.C., Oct. 20, 1990.
- National Organization for Women, www.now.org.
- National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges. Navigating
Custody and Visitation Evaluations in Cases with Domestic Violence: A Judges Guide.
Reno, Nevada: 2006.
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