What Divorced Parents Can Learn From Atlas Shrugged

Fifty-four years after publication, Ayn Rand’s magnum opus, Atlas Shrugged, has hit the big screen, opening to modest success by independent film standards. It is currently #6 on Amazon, and the “second most influential book for Americans today” according to a Library of Congress and Book of the Month Club survey. Millions of readers from across the political spectrum (including many well-known celebrities) have read “Atlas” and publicly acknowledge the positive contributions of Ayn Rand’s novels to their happiness and pursuit of excellence.

Atlas Shrugged’s position on politics, society, and self-interest draws cheers and jeers, and many people part company with the author on various issues. What inspires most fans, and a reason for its enduring popularity, is its noble vision of remaining true to cherished values. It is a vision that divorced parents can embrace to resist powerful temptations to trash an ex. To read the entire article on The Huffington Post, “Like” it, share it on Facebook and Twitter, and leave comments, click here.

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Critics Continue to Draw Attention to My Work

Once again I must thank my critics for doing such a good job of promoting my work. Their latest assistance came in the form of protest letters to the organization that invited me to deliver the keynote speech at their annual conference in Massachusetts. The campaign to alienate me from New England professionals backfired. For the first time in the organization’s eighteen-year history, the conference sold out, leaving a waiting list of disappointed professionals denied entrance to the packed house. Continue reading

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Why Did You and Daddy Get Divorced?

When parents decide to divorce they face the difficult challenge of telling the children. The task is so difficult that about one in four parents say nothing to the children. They leave the kids to figure out for themselves what is happening to their family. Only one in twenty parents do it right. They explain what is going on, what is going to happen, and what will be different for the children. And they promote an atmosphere in which kids feel free to ask questions and express their worries. Continue reading

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NH Supreme Court on Parental Alienation

In a stunning ruling, of interest to all those concerned with parental alienation, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire overturned a lower court’s award of custody to a mother who was found to be alienating her children from their father. Continue reading

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PAX

Announcing a new category in Plutoverse: Parental Alienation Exchange or PAX. This is in response to a suggestion by a mother in Australia who would like to see a central registry where alienated parents can connect, communicate, and coordinate their efforts to raise awareness of the effects of divorce poison.

Her thought was that a category in Plutoverse would allow people to link up to their country’s central registry. I suggest that comments to this post begin by simply stating the poster’s geographical location (e.g., AUSTRALIA).

PAX is the Latin word for peace. I hope this resource will help alienated parents find some peace through connections with others who have walked in their shoes.

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Children Don’t Always Say What They Need

When training judges about parental alienation cases I emphasize that a child’s stated wishes may be a poor index of the child’s best interests.

Children do not always want what is best for them. What they say they want is not always what they truly want. And they do not always say what they truly want. Continue reading

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Parental Alienation Cited in Goldman Decision

Parental alienation is emotional abuse. Judge Guadagno is clear about this. Ruling last week in the Goldman case, the judge calls the behavior of the child’s stepfather and family “contemptible” for filling the boy’s head with false information aimed at undermining his love for his dad.

Referring to the “continuous efforts at parental alienation” begun by the boy’s mother and continued by his stepfather and maternal grandparents, and their “attempt to implant false memories and erase Sean’s true memories of his father,” the judge wrote, “It is difficult to conceive of a more dramatic example of emotional abuse of a young child.”

What is self-evident to this judge is incomprehensible to a cadre of naysayers who deny the reality of this form of abuse unless the perpetrator is a violent man. These deniers fear that the term parental alienation is merely a tool for abusive men to deflect blame for their children’s rejection of them. As advocates for victims of domestic violence, they must acknowledge that some men exact revenge against former spouses by poisoning the children’s affections for their mother. When children become alienated from a mother who is a former victim of domestic violence, they call this domestic violence by proxy.

The Goldman case, though, highlights what is wrong with dismissing all cases of parental alienation except those that fit the pattern of violent man against woman. In this case, the perpetrators of the abuse are male and female. Neither has been accused of domestic violence. They have been accused of alienating a boy from his father — parental alienation. And, no court has found that David Goldman is an abuser.

Unless we deny the reality identified by three court-appointed Brazilian psychologists, the Brazilian court, and the New Jersey court, we must conclude that David Goldman and his son have been harmed by parental alienation, not by domestic violence by proxy.

Can an abusive parent invoke the concept of parental alienation to blame and discredit a protective parent? Yes. Courts must exercise great care before accepting allegations of alienation as true, or they will mistakenly place children with physically and psychologically abusive parents. But this concern must not keep courts from protecting children against the cruelty of being manipulated to disown a good and loving parent.

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When Kids Need to Know Bad Things About a Parent – Part 3

The Warshak Test helps parents judge whether their criticisms of each other are likely to help or hurt their children. The purpose of the test is to raise awareness of the impact of your words on your children and to help you learn why and when to keep quiet about the other parent and how to speak when it is appropriate.

To illustrate the use of this test, consider a scenario that often prompts divorced parents to criticize their ex-spouses to their children: reacting to a parent who is chronically late. Read the entire article, and leave comments on, The Huffington Post.

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Kudos for Pluto

The American Journal of Family Therapy, a peer-review, refereed journal, has published a review of the DVD, Welcome Back, Pluto: Understanding, Preventing, and Overcoming Parental Alienation. The review was co-written by forensic psychologist Dr. S. Richard Sauber, and attorney, David L. Levy.

The review called Pluto: “Moving and trail-blazing . . . should be a standard part of the curriculum of co-parenting classes, parent education workshops, and anger management groups.”

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Bad-mouthing a Parent Harms Children’s Self-esteem

In response to a comment on my recent Huffpost blogpost, I wrote the following.

Children identify with both parents. Remember how you felt as a child when a playmate trashed-talked your parents? In my day we called it “ranking out” a kid’s parents. Stephen King referred to this as a breaking “the cardinal rule for kids.” In The Body (the story adapted for the film Stand By Me), King explained, “You could say anything about another kid, you could rank him to the dogs and back, but you didn’t say a word ever about his mom and dad. . . . If a kid ranked out your mom and dad, you had to feed him some knuckles.”

The situation is more challenging for a child when the attack on a parent comes from the other parent. If a child sides with the critical parent, her image of the other parent suffers. If a child opposes the critical parent, her image of that parent suffers. Even if she tries to say out of the conflict, she feels guilty for failing to defend the target of the criticism.

When children are led to believe that one of their parents is not worthy of being loved, respected, and admired, they cannot obliterate their identification with that parent. They can repudiate it. They can drive their identification underground. But, turning against an aspect of their core identity causes emotional havoc and chips away at self-esteem.

To see the other comments to my blogpost, and to leave your own comments, click here.

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