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Access and Visitation Blocking: The First Ingredient of Parental Alienation

9/19/2016

 
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This is the first of four weekly posts regarding the four criteria which are present in cases where Parental Alienation is present.

These posts are derived from an article that was published in the Florida Bar Journal in 1999. Since that time, we have learned quite a bit, and it seemed fitting to update those original thoughts.

The first criterion that inhabits virtually all parental alienation cases is Access and Visitation Blocking.

I believe the most important thing to understand about this criterion is that it occupies a vast continuum of possibilities. On the most extreme end would be the overt and purposeful blocking of access to one’s children by what will end up being the alienating parent. This extreme and unsubtle version of this criterion would be that alienating parent refusing to deliver or produce the children when the allotted access time occurs. Perhaps surprisingly, this extreme expression of this kind of access blocking is more the exception than the rule, since it is easy to spot and confront.


If a court order states that child A will be delivered to the non-custodial parent on say Friday at 3:00 PM, and the child is not delivered and no warning or reason is given, that alienating and offending parent is placing them self in a position to be chastised by the court. While this does occur on occasion, it is my experience that it is rather rare. Most alienating parents are more savvy than this.

We must be reminded that the Family Law system throughout the land is biased towards the protection of children, which it should be. Children should and must be shielded from abuse and danger. It is important to understand that this default setting of protection does in fact constitute a bias. What this means is that even the most subtle suggestion that a child would be better off not seeing that (targeted) parent tends to be absorbed by this bias. The legal phrase “out of an abundance of caution” is often heard during these moments.

In other words, out of caution for making certain that the child in question is not in danger, the access time might well be at least postponed, if not cancelled all together, due to this bias. However, as we know in the case of parental alienation, it is precisely this bias that is manipulated and exploited. In other words, even when there is no articulated (false) allegation as to why a child should not see that other parent, the bias to protect that child from danger very often jumps into the thinking of the court, which causes the court to rarely act quickly and decisively to confront a violation of its own order.

Therefore we more often than not find that the access and visitation blocking represented by this criterion implicitly clothed in some suggestion that the child is better off not having their contact time with that parent   passes muster with the court. “There must be some reason this child did not want to see that parent” is a phrase that hovers over these incidents, which causes the court to “lean back” out of caution, rather than “lean forward” in a confrontational posture. This caution and hesitation is the very ghost of this bias to protect. It simply is the default setting, so much so that little reason must be given as to why the court’s order was not followed. I stress this point so much here because I believe that the bias to protect - again, legitimate and necessary as it is - constitutes a powerful undertow that can easily wash a parent’s time with their child out to sea, so to speak. 

Therefore, the alienating parents task is easy. Even the hint or suggestion of displeasure or danger tips the bias over the edge. And it is this pietre dish of bias to protect, where the bacterium of alienation can grow both quickly and easily.

The playing field is not level. It is slanted in favor of the alienating parent when alienation is present. We must simply recognize this if it is to be overcome. 

So what forms of this access and visitation blocking might we see? The most extreme and unsubtle is noted above, but the more subtle yet still impacting must also be identified.

In today’s hyper communicative environment, replete with social media, text messaging, Facebook, Twitter, email and telephone, all of these media are subject to the expression of this criterion.

When it comes to social media, we might find that a parent is “unfriended” or perhaps an alternate identify is created for purposes of cutting off communication with that parent. In the case of the other digital media, we see alternate email addresses being created, and alternate cell phone accounts being opened. In the case of telephonic communication, we might see telephone calls not being returned or voicemail messages not being played.

Ironically perhaps, since we now have so many more communicative media available, they all represent opportunities to show to the court the presence of this criterion. I therefore make the strong recommendation that logs of calls, messages and all other data exposing this criterion be created and maintained. While it is unrealistic to expect that any trier of fact (Judge) is going to listen to many or any of these messages, the effect of having abundant documentation that carries the theme of access and visitation blocking, is significant.

Moving down the scale of subtly, one of the more common expressions of this criterion is that of the alienating parent scheduling a child for activities that occupy the time that the child is to see the targeted parent. This has the familiar theme of thereby causing the targeted parent to be in a quandary as to what to do. Should he or she insist on disallowing the child to participate in the activity in favor of contact, or should he or she alter their activities to attend the activity with the child, or should he or she simply allow the activity to occur and forgo contact? There are no pat answers to these questions as each set of circumstances must be assessed and weighed individually.

However what is clear is that this quandary as to what to do may be presented to the court as having been created by the actions of the alienating parent. The alienating parent must be shown to be the puppeteer who manipulates the child to be in the middle, and to act as their agent, and examples of using activities to block access can be a fertile ground to make this argument.

In my experience, when the court begins to understand the pattern of one (alienating) parent setting up circumstance after circumstance wherein this quandary occurs, the court begins to rule in a more productive direction. Until that is made clear however, the court most often fails to act in a curative direction, if it acts at all. As with my other posts, I invite comment and suggestion. I hope that this discussion helps.

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Traci
10/26/2016 04:25:52 pm

Once the blocking occurs through false allegations and perjury, I will tell you now, that no judge will overturn their sole custody award to the alienating parent. Regardless of the abusive environment the child is now a prisoner in, a judge admitting they were wrong simply is not going to happen. That doesn't stop the attorney's and mental health professionals from further exploiting and financially crippling the targeted parent. Consultation fees, phasing, psych evals, etc., do absolutely nothing for the children or targeted parents. In the end, the alienating parent looks like the hero because he/she has employed the help of professionals to literally turn the targeted parent into the unfit mother or father they were falsely accused of being in the first place. Targeted parents wind up indigent and once they do, what course of action are they to take? A once healthy, well-bonded, and successful parent has been reduced to a shell of an existence suffering from PTSD, fear/anxiety, possible drug adddiction, depression and so on. How can anyone claiming "best interest of the child" justify allowing the entire destruction and degradation of another human being who was simply nothing more than the "better parent?"

James t craft
4/26/2017 06:30:38 pm

That is so true and seems like my life story ....counseling about broke me and they would never testify what they told me was the problem with my ex,,,last time judge just said she was an enabler and that my daughter would not be successful...and that was it ...end of visitation at thirteen years old on Father's Day ,,,,,had to make sure I remember the last time I seen my daughter at my house,,,,

M Beall
7/17/2018 06:38:44 pm

I couldn’t have stayed it better!!! We got screwed from the moment the lies and perjury started! Allegations that NOBODY asked for proof of is what really drives me insane.

Maria Wiggins
11/18/2018 07:24:18 pm

This is exactly what's happening to me.

Gen
3/16/2019 05:27:16 pm

Wow

Jill Wise
11/17/2016 06:26:17 am

Not only is this so so so true, in my case, my alienating ex and his family went to the GAL and out right lied to her, claiming I was a drug addict and in rehab while our son was staying with his father. As you know, Dr. Bone. Had it not been for you, this GAL believed my ex husbands cruel and utter lie about me, never once asked me about whether this was fact or fiction, and most probably would still have believed this was the truth. I think that it is important for target parents to know that the courts are bias in favor of alienating parents, but also, they need to be very aware that the legal professionals and therapists very well may have already been told outright lies about them without any knowledge or questions asked by the courts "professionals."

Tammie
11/28/2016 09:31:13 pm

I agree with Jill that the courts are bias and it is scary to think they might be in the alienating parents favor. Little did I know that my ex husband actually knew the woman that did the home study. Not only that but she told him that she would help him. Well after the home study was done and I naively felt pretty good about it all, she then made a recommendation to the courts that we (my ex and myself) attend a 6 week class TOGETHER for high conflict divorce cases at our cost of $300 each. Here is the kicker...... when I arrived at the class.....SHE WAS THE TEACHER!!! Conflict of interest??? I was found to be in contempt because I refused to sit in that room with him which the judge only made me restart the class, but my ex was not there. What a crooked system..... I am a dog trainer.... I think I will sign up as a vendor for the county and be their expert dog person.... any dog that bites shall be subject to my recommendations and attend my obedience classes!

To Traci's comment..... why can't a person that has been alienated file a complaint against the courts for violation of there fourth ammendment rights when the courts and professionals have been utilized to help backup the alienating parents claims? I have been looking into this myself. Although I also tried to represent myself in court and was completely shut down and not allowed to speak. This was after I had studied and prepared for months so that I went in educated in the courts typical standards of everything from appearance to how to address the court and the suitable way to carry out my time in front of the judge. I thought that as a citizen, I had the right to represent myself in the US court system. What am I missing here?

Traci Ross link
5/7/2017 11:56:58 pm

Tammie, you're absolutely correct in all of those remedies that we should be afforded. As for a reason as to why we "can't" is simply one word - corruption. Even when writing my original comment, I was still unaware of just how deep the corruption runs. It seems like I am constantly discovering it's deepebing and darkening depths.

I just self represented my own custody trial - against my objections and without any due process procedures afforded to me. There is never a winner when the children are always the losers

John Oral
8/12/2017 08:51:31 am

The problem here is the fact that everyone working in the family court industry knows about parental alienation. Judges know it very well but they are afraid to change the status quo because they are not taught about what happens to the child in the end. Psychological and emotional abuse lasts a lifetime and that child continues to hate half of himself or herself because of the alienation factor. No one condones any kind of abuse and they should not but the states must follow their own rules and statutes and psych -emotional abuse is abuse. I call it the "invisible abuse" that is right in front of you but you dont want to damage the status quo. So, judges sometimes overlook this type of abuse because they dont see what happens tomorrow, they care about today so why not "err on the side of caution" and play it safe for their political careeer. Because, what if that child is reunited with the alienated parent and that parent really does abuse the child? Then it looks very bad for that judge doesnt it? In essence, it is ok to deny the parent access and stymie his or her constitutional right to the child as long as we play "keep away" and "hide and seek". If you confront the issue before it gets worse then you are better off but if you dont then a temporary order of no contact until the specialist says you can see your child becomes permanent to the point where the child actually believes the abuse occurred. The child is then afraid to speak up because they dont want to hurt the alienator so the alienated parent continues to fight to see the child and finally has to give up because it takes years of fighting and eventual bankruptcy of the alienated parent. Lawyers are the key here and if they dont encourage peace them these cases will continue to damage families and flood our court system. Custody hearings take months to get in front of the judge but when you fall behind on child support you will find yourself at a support hearing immediately. That alienated parents' money is much more important than his or her acceas to the child. Everyone loses and judges need to understand that, it is as easy as that. A child hating half of themselves can never have a good outcome in the end. A note on Gal's..... they need ce credits on pas and lawyers should also be required to take ce classes on pas too. Dr. Bone is the prime example of someone who can educate the very people we turn to for help but if this is not required, the very thing that is most important to us will be destroyed,,, the family unit.

Dwayne Huston
10/26/2017 12:20:22 pm

The courts are failing children subjected to the child psychological abuse of "parental alienation" due to mental health professionals giving conflicting assessments of non-existing pathology from BOTH sides of the "staff split" mental health surrounding divorce. On one side PAS "experts" claim PAS is the source of the child's pathology. On the other side, IGNORANT psychologists claim broadly normal range parent-child conflict from the targeted parent is the source of the child's pathology.

The problem is that BOTH sides of the "staff split" mental health are MAKING UP PATHOLOGY, which is NOT existing accepted peer-reviewed constructs of psychology.

Our psychologically abused children REQUIRE both sides to return to use professional practice uses existing accepted peer-reviewed constructs of psychology to clear ALL of the conflict and mistakes.

The leadership of mental health has made their point clear on Dr. Gardner's model and variations of it clear...

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.researchgate.net/publication/303095312_Child_Affected_by_Parental_Relationship_Distress/amp#ampshare=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/303095312_Child_Affected_by_Parental_Relationship_Distress

http://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2008/01/pas-syndrome.aspx

The leadership of mental health has continued to tell PAS "experts" to use existing accepted peer-reviewed constructs of psychology. Dr. Craig Childress listened to the leadership of mental health and used existing accepted peer-reviewed constructs of psychology to properly diagnose "parental alienation".

This is the compromise REQUIRED to STOP mental health professionals from just MAKING UP PATHOLOGY on BOTH sides.

https://drcraigchildressblog.com/2017/08/05/the-solution-the-return-to-professional-practice/

The PAS "experts" need to start supportting the far superior model of "parental alienation", which requires NO NEW "CONTROVERSIAL" CONSTRUCTS OF PSYCHOLOGY, which has been described by Dr. Craig Childress with AB-PA.

Elizabeth Jaggers
1/6/2019 12:34:35 pm

Thank you so much for the information. I have found it both useful and eye-opening. I especially appreciated the links, that went into details.

I would hope that we could know, one day, the far reaching effects divorce, and how it's handled, has on a child. I believe if you explain and you allow the child to continue to be a child it can work. But that's when the parents are mature and responsible.... Not trying to alienate each other - because the person that hurts the most is the child. It leaves a gaping wound that may, or may not, heal. The wound can be there for years, well into adulthood, maybe even hidden from you. It shows itself in many ways in your impatience, in your perfectionist ways, in your addiction, in your anger, in being a bridge.

c cimi
5/30/2018 11:40:24 am

My teens are so severely alienated that I fear fillicide by way of Munchausen's by proxy is occuring

James Kelly link
6/4/2018 07:48:33 pm

I have identified 6 criteria necessary, and parental alienation as a normal range defense mechanism of the child towards prolonged stress induced subclinical hypercortisolism and it’s neurotoxic damage. This is fully published and cited on my website.

Erin m Hunt
12/1/2018 04:41:18 pm

I have been out thru this trauma myself,and the frustration of having no help is exhausting, I have tried to move forward,start over, yet the child support laws make it tough, l Iive in a rural town with limited transit,so I am forced to settle for a minimum wage job working 35 hours a week i bring home 100$ with 2other children it's tough to pay household bills,school xtras,and childcare. Recently I was forced to quit my job due to lack of childcare,child support brought me back to court threatening jail,I informed them i applied for state assistance,yet I was still given 30 days to pay 800$or do 60 days in jail.I am already riding my bike throughout town trying to go thru the process to get help,and they are beating my mental health down criminalizing me for inability to pay. I have no problem paying for my kids since that's all I am allowed to do since my children were stripped from our home placed with their father and the case was closed with no contact,and I never even had a charge against children. Faith has carried me thru and I am thankful my children had their father, but the system could use a little adjusting!

Michelle Rostron
1/4/2019 06:11:13 am

I have been suffering from alienation since pre divorce it is started from early childhood conditioning the child to be cautious of the affection of the alienated parent and to be rewarded with any attention provided by the dominant alienator. It is embedded prior to the separation as a finely honed tool. I see familiar habits as I work in an Emergency room. Many times the children are brought prior to visitation to be seen or have visitation suspended for the weekend., or immediately after returning the child to the custodial parent with hopes of deterring future visits. It seems that maybe offering continuing education on this syndrome and the role medical personel have would be beneficial as continuing education and available credits if placed on the more used educational sites. I have only been able to establish a relationship with one of five now adult children. She still also remains extremely cautious with her relationship with me as not to cause objections from her siblings.

Jennifer
1/4/2019 05:27:05 pm

I really think that alienation of the kids from the parents would harm them but I really think that the kids need both parents in there life and right now I am going through a very hard stage of getting my kids back let me tell you how the system like DCPP are bunch of people who makes peoples lives miserable and think they are always right all the time.

Michelle Rostron
1/8/2019 05:19:22 am

unsuscribed in error

Frustrated in Florida
1/28/2019 04:04:58 am

There is a judge in Fort Myers that made the alienating parent repeat after him: “if I keep my kids away from the coparent, one more time, I will loose custody”. I actually thought he meant what he said, being a judge who said this was the worst case of alienation he has ever seen, but he has done nothing. He has the proof. So the therapist sees the abuse of the children, the judge sees it, and they pat each other on the back as partners, requiring therapy to continue or someone won’t get paid. Forget the severe emotional damage and multiple moves with different strange men, that is not important. It is all about bleeding people for money so they can have their vacation homes and fancy cars.


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    J. Michael Bone, PhD.

    Dr. Bone is an experienced consultant for cases involving Parental Alienation and has spent over 25 years working with high conflict divorce as a therapist, expert witness, mediator, evaluator and consultant, both nationally and internationally. 

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