From 'Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome': Reuni

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From 'Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome': Reuni

Post by Daanyeer »

Source: mensdaily

Glenn Sacks

From 'Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome': Reuniting with the Targeted Parent (Part I)
October 17, 2007 at 8:33 am · Filed under Vox Populi


One area of keen interest for divorced fathers is how alienated children reunite with the parent who was the target of the Parental Alienation campaign. Sadly, sometimes this reunification never occurs. Many times it does, but only years later.

A few years ago I did a His Side with Glenn Sacks show called Hope for the Holidays: Spontaneous Reunification, in which I discussed this issue. One of my guests was Allen Green, author of Blind Baseball: A Father's War. Green has experienced PAS and reunification firsthand, and he had some interesting advice. I don't have the exact quote, but he basically said, "Don't destroy yourself. It's very, very hard, but if you're the target parent of Parental Alienation, play for the long haul. Remember you still have the kids as adults, plus you have grandchildren. Fight the best you can, but always keep the long-term in mind--sooner or later, the children usually come back."

In Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome: Breaking the Ties that Bind, Amy J.L. Baker details many of the reunions between children and their alienated parents, and delineates some common scenarios under which this occurs.

One of Baker's reunification scenarios is not a happy one--the adult child reunites with the alienated parent because they now themselves have experienced Parental Alienation as a parent, and see through the lies they were fed as a child. I've previously discussed the case of David, one of the adult children of Parental Alienation who Baker interviewed--David's parents divorced when he was six, and he who was caught in his mother's long-term alienation campaign against his father. (To learn more about David's case, click here and here).

David only began to gain insight into the way he had been misled when, in his 20s, he himself divorced and his ex-wife turned his daughter against him. Of his divorce, David explains:

“Initially there was some problems with the parenting time but then I was always able to get things worked out. I started keeping pretty good notes so that if I had to go back to court I would be prepared. When we did go back to court they would slap my wife’s hand and I would see my daughter for a while until the next time. I noticed this from an adult perspective and I started to remember things that had happened to me and there started to become a number of similarities. For example, little instances would happen (between he and his daughter) and they would be blown up way out of proportion and out of context and then I wouldn’t be able to see my daughter. I started to see too many similarities. And actually my current wife started to say that I should get back in touch with my dad and then I called him up and made arrangements to get together.” David had seen his mother employ the same tactics when he was a kid, and began to see that his negative feelings about his dad had largely been created by his mom. He contacted his father, for the first time in decades. He explains:

“It went pretty well actually. I called him up and introduced myself and he said, ‘Fine. Great.’ We talked for a while and made arrangements to meet for lunch and we went there and we sat and talked and ate lunch and really things couldn’t have gone smoother. We talked a little bit about that (the alienation) but never really in detail like maybe we could have because I never really felt like we had to.”

Sadly, to date David has been unable to reunite with his own daughter, who is now 25, and who he has not seen in over 10 years. He says: (more...)
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