Parental Alienation In The News
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Parental Alienation: A Mental Diagnosis?
Parental Alienation is a real and a growing problem. A father is powerless for the most part to do anything. The damage done to the children is serious and long lasting. It has been over one year since I have been with my daughters. This is a great article that is in the news about how the medical community is starting to realize the seriousness of parental alienation.
From an early age, Anne was taught by her mother to fear her father. Behind his back, her mom warned that he was 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.
via Parental Alienation: A Mental Diagnosis? – US News and World Report.
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2 Comments
November 8th, 2009 at 5:56 am
Hello:
Thank you for picking up Parental Alienation: A Mental Diagnosis, and sharing it with your readers.
I’m Mike Jeffries, the author of A Family’s Heartbreak: A Parent’s Introduction to Parental Alienation (http://www.afamilysheartbreak.com). I’ve seen this proposal and I am pleased to say this it is the definitive document on parental alienation produced to date. Mental health professionals can’t address what they don’t understand, and getting parental alienation into the DSM is an excellent step towards helping children have normal, healthy loving relationships with both parents after divorce or separation.
Thanks again,
mike jeffries
mike jeffries´s last blog ..A Family’s Heartbreak at a book store near you
November 8th, 2009 at 7:02 pm
Thanks for the input. It has been over one year since I have talked to my daughters. 9 years of battling and in the end I did not know about alienation until it was too late.