PARENTECTOMY
Parental Alienation -
Preventing Parentectomy - Frank S. Williams MD ....Preventing Parentectomy
Keynote Address,
Fifth Annual Conference
National Council for
Children's Rights
Washington DC,
October 20 1990
By Frank S. Williams
M.D.
Frank S. Williams,
M.D. Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist and Psychoanalyst for children,
adolescents and adults, is Director of Family and Child Psychiatry at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre in Los Angeles. Dr. Williams also directs the
Cedars-Sinai Program for Children and Families of Divorce.
INTRODUCTION
Parentectomy is the
removal, erasure, or severe diminution of a caring parent in a child's life.
Parentectomy covers a
large range of parent removal from partial parentectomy, "You may visit
your Daddy or Mommy every other Sunday"; to total parentectomy, as in
Parental Alienation Syndrome, described by Gardner; or complete parent absence
or removal.
The victims of parentectomy are the children
and the parents so severed from each other's lives. A parentectomy is the most
cruel infringement upon children's rights to be carried out against human
children by human adults. Parentectomies are psychologically lethal to children
and parents.
In the worst consequential wake of a
parentectomy , the victim parent gives up and walks away from the
surgically-minded adults and the victim children. When this happens, the victim
parent walks away from the chronic warring battlefield with intense ambivalence
and confusion, faced with an insoluble dilemma. He or she knows that the
chronic war in which one parent tries to erase the other parent, and the other
parent struggles to stave off the parentectomy, is itself destructive to the
children, as it causes ongoing tension and stress in them, as well as in the
ongoing interaction between the children and each of their parents.
On the other hand, if
a mother or father gives up and walks away from the war, the children feel
abandoned by a loved and needed parent, and unusually resent and become
depressed over the abandonment. Although children hate fighting and pray for it
to stop, they misinterpret a parent's giving up the fight as that parent's not
caring enough about them. Yet, clinicians know that, in these cases, even when
a father or mother gives up the battle for custody, it is hardly ever due to
not caring for their children enough.
Rather, they give up the fight because they are emotionally depleted,
physically exhausted, worn out, depressed or financially drained; they don't want
to continue to subject their children to the relentless warring; they discover
that they have little chance of success against a prejudiced legal/judicial
system, and little chance of success against a prejudiced, incompetent or
skillful "hired gun" - mental health professional, who has been paid
to facilitate a parentectomy. Unfortunately, for the right price, such
psychological surgeons can be found.
Further Consequences
of a Parentectomy
In addition to the worst scenario of actually
being abandoned, when a parentectomy occurs, children lose the rewarding
ongoing opportunity to give and receive love to and from a parent who has loved
them. These children frequently become depressed - especially in later
adolescence. At times their depression reaches suicidal proportions. In my own
clinical work, as well as in school and emergency room consultation experience
during the past 15 years, I have found a very high correlation between
suicidality in adolescents and a divorce in their earlier years, which
virtually results in one parent being erased from their lives.
They often lack self
esteem, particularly if they believe the erased parent willfully abandoned
them, or when the remaining parent behaves as if the erased parent never
existed or never loved and cared for the children. Children with parentectomies
often go on to mistrust and fail in adult intimate relationships, this is for
several reasons. first, they tend to see people as good or bad, right or wrong,
loving or hateful, worthy of gratitude or worthy of punishment. Secondly, they
have usually witnessed models of adult
relationships based on mutual accusations and defensiveness, as opposed
to the healthier model of tolerating
ambivalence about the good and bad in others and in oneself. Further, in cases
of Parental Alienation Syndrome, they may leave home prematurely or turn
against the "favoured' parent later in life. Their turning against the one
favoured parent may come about in later adolescence, when they realize they
were "brainwashed" victims caused by a malicious, angry, or disturbed
parent, to unjustifiably hate the other parent.
Methods Used in the
Service of Parentectomy
A parent seeking to
perform a parentectomy usually enlists the help of attorneys, relatives, friends, and mental
health professionals, in the pursuit of
the radical removal of the other parent.
They have several methods at their disposal. First they can get the
potential parent victim - usually the
Father - to see a "friendly," "brilliant" mental health clinician or child development
specialist, who will brain-drill the
potential parent victim about a distorted, out-of-context version of the
psychological and developmental needs of children. The child development
specialist will reiterate that children - especially young children - need
the stability, constancy and consistency
of one home, and that it is emotionally harmful for the children to be shuttled
back and forth between homes. They will reiterate that children need a primary
psychological caretaker.
From my own clinical experience with children,
I would agree with the position that one home provides stability and
continuity. However, when parents are
divorced, the children cannot enjoy the benefit of both parents living
with them in the same home. Therefore
shuttling between homes may be inevitable. In
divorce, we usually do not have the option of choosing what is in the
best interest of the children. Instead,
we most often must choose the least
detrimental of several detrimental options. This is especially so when a
child has been psychologically bonded to two parents. Of two potential evils
for children - the evil of shuttling between the homes of two loving, caring
parents versus the evil of losing one
such parent - certainly the lesser evil is shuttling between two homes. It is
the continued parental bonding, not the number of homes or vehicular travel,
that will be the crucial determinant of children's forward psychological
development following divorce. In these days, when both parents frequently
work, and rely on sharing the child-rearing with each other, with other family members and
with housekeepers and day care personnel, the concept of one "primary
psychological caretaker" is outdated. frequently there are two
psychological caretakers or a network of caretakers, supervised by two parents.
Should the "friendly,"
"brilliant" mental health clinician described above fail to convince the victim of the need for a
parentectomy, the determined other
parent can then enlist the aid of the "hired-gun" child
development expert. After a brief,
superficial contact with the other parent, of times without ever seeing the
victim parent or without ever seeing the children interact with the victim
parent - the "hired-gun" will unequivocally and with utmost
scientific certainty declare:
1. that the children mistrust and are afraid
of the victim parent;
2. that the victim parent lacks empathy for
the children;
3. that the victim parent emotionally abuses
the children;
4. that the victim parent is an alcoholic or
other substance abuser;
5. that the victim parent is impulsive and
prone to potential child physical
abuse; and,
6. worst of all, that the victim parent
suffers with a serious psychiatric
disorder, such as Borderline Personality,
Narcissistic, Anti-Social, or
Obsessive Compulsive Personality
disorder, or perhaps even Paranoia or
Schizophrenia.
Allegations of Child
Sexual Abuse
Should the "friendly" counselling
and "hired gun" approaches fail, the parent determined to perform a parentectomy can make
an allegation of Child Sexual Abuse.
This is most effective when the child is of preschool age, and easily confused. Such allegations need careful
expert professional attention. Proper thorough evaluations must be conducted,
during which time the child should not be removed from either parent. In
selective situations, following parental separation and divorce, mothers,
father and children are highly vulnerable to
sexual abuse activity.
When a child or parent is quantitively
deprived of loving parent-child contact, the child or parent may over-cherish
or over-respond to physical contact, which may become eroticized. When there is
no other adult to console a lonely parent who feels frightened at night and
that lonely parent's child also feels lonely and frightened at night, the
parent and child may wind up sleeping in the same bed together. this increases
their vulnerability to erotic, sexual contacts.
Although we should not summarily dismiss the
possibility of actual sexual molestation, at the same time we have found that
most allegations of child sexual abuse
during custody wars are false allegations. Some are calculated manipulations, while
others result from parents' anxieties, misinterpretations, and their clouded
perceptions during custody battles.
Absence of
Cooperation
If all the above methods fail, the parent
determined to perform a parentectomy can then claim, "We can't cooperate
and therefore we cannot share parenting by way of any form of joint custody, as
joint custody requires substantial parental cooperation." Unfortunately,
this declaration is often supported by mental health clinicians, because of
their misunderstanding or over-statement of the writings of Dr. Richard
Gardner. Dr. Gardner's clinical experience with children and parents of divorce
is often misused to reinforce this faulty point of view about parental
cooperation.
When Richard Gardner stated that "joint
custody" requires a high degree of parental cooperation (1986, 1989), he
was using his particular definition of joint custody - one in which there is a
free-flowing, flexible arrangement; one in which the children and the parents
may frequently shift schedules, may often change the days and times the
children are with each parent; and may alter parental responsibilities for the
children's school and social activities. In such flexible arrangements, the
shifts in schedule and responsibilities can occur during any given day, week or
month. Of course, such an unstructured, ever-changing form of joint custody
require frequent parental contact, negotiation and discussion, and often
involves the children. Such a form of flexible, free-flowing joint custody
would require parental cooperation, and would not work well where one parent
hates or is emotionally allergic to the other parent.
This particular form of joint custody however,
is now a rare and somewhat antiquated form of joint custody. It reflects the
efforts of those few special early "pioneer" parents who respected
each other as parents and individuals. They were therefore able to explore
flexible joint arrangements in attempts to continue their children's lives with
both parents. In essence they explored and maintained living environments,
approximating the pre-divorce situation. In contrast to Dr. Gardner's
definition, my definition of "joint custody" is a multi-faceted one.
At one end of the spectrum, it includes such flexible unstructured, free
flowing arrangements, defined by Gardner. At the other end of teh spectrum it
includes a detailed, rigid and highly structured parent-child plan, which
minimizes the need for parent contact, negotiation and communication. Between
the two extreme ends of the spectrum are varying arrangements in which real significant
living time, including overnights, is shared with the children by both parents,
with varying degrees of structure and rigidity, as required. Indeed, with
warring, unfriendly, uncooperative parents, a highly structured, rigid,
inflexible custody schedule is necessary and appropriate. The structure for
high conflict parents should include transitions for the children between
parents, on neutral grounds; for example, the children can be picked up from
and be returned to school, instead of the other parent's residence. This
arrangement avoids points of battle between the parents, and avoids the need
for frequent negotiations on a day-today, or week-to-week basis, which, in
turn, avoids the need to battle over decision-making, residential time, or
parental authority in front of the children.
It is unfortunate that Dr. Gardner has been
misunderstood and misused by some mental health clinicians advocating for sole
custody to one parent. In consultation with Dr. Gardner, I learned that he
believes that when there are two highly bonded loving parents, a rigid
structured schedule of even 50-50 shared residential overnights, as well as a
pre-defined structure decision-making authority plan for each parent may be
appropriate to best serve the children. He would just not define such a 50-50,
rigid, structured arrangement as "joint-custody".
Dynamics Behind the
Pursuit of Parentectomy
Parental Identity
The fear of losing
one's parental identity is the principal dynamic behind parentectomy efforts.
Throughout life, all persons gain and integrate many identities, which become
part of their self-images. These identities include one's identity as: a child member
of a family; a student; a peer or team member; a professional or other worker;
a mate with marital identity; a person with a parental identity; and a
grandparent with a grand-parental identity. Until recent times, some parents,
more traditionally mothers in our western culture, reached a point of divorce
with primarily marital and parental identities. For such parents, as their mate
or marital identity dissolves, as it does in divorce, the only identity often
left for them to hold on to, cherish, and fight for is their parental identity.
Grandparents, especially when they are retired
from both work and parenting, often fear loss of their primary remaining
identity - their grandparents identity. As they envision sharing or losing
valued time with their grandchildren, their fears may prompt them to harp on
their sons and daughters to fight for sole custody of the children, so they
will not become "unemployed" grandparents.
The appearance of a potential stepmother or
stepfather on the scene is highly threatening to parental identity. This is
especially so when that newcomer has a great need to parent. Hearing one's
children refer to a step parent as "mommy"
or "daddy",
often triggers the search for the parental scalpel.
The Loss of the
Family
For adults, the pain
of losing one's family structure is very intense, and in may cases, much more
intense than the pain of losing one's mate. Divorcing parents often desperately
hold on to a myth that their family has not fallen apart, in their attempt to
not feel the pain and depression which accompanies the rupture of the family.
They maintain the myth of a one-family structure, embodying elements of one
home and one family. This myth is much easier to hold on to is a parent does
not have to see the other parent. It is especially easier to hold on to if a
replacement is brought in to fulfill the other parent's role, namely a
boyfriend, stepfather, girlfriend, or stepmother.
In counselling parents of divorce, I have
found it much more productive to focus on the pain caused by the loss of family
structure, as opposed to focusing on the pain caused by the parent's prior
battle with each other, or the pain caused by their loss of each other.
The literature on divorce leans heavily on the
concept that divorced parents chronically battle in an effort to hold on to
each other and not lose the marital relationship. Although that dynamic does
exist, in my experience it is not a universal post-divorce dynamic, and it is
not the primary reason behind prolonged custody struggles or prolonged custody
wars. Instead, I find the need to hold on to this myth of one non-ruptured
family is a more usual dynamic behind prolonged custody wars. Unfortunately,
maintaining that myth of one family, requires erasing the other parent.
Envy, Rage and
Revenge
A parent's desire to punish the other parent
by depriving the other parent of his or her children often relates to the other
parent's apparent or fantasied greater success or luck in life. This can create
rage and envy. The real or fantasied greater success is in the area of: finding
a new and rewarding love relationship; achieving greater financial security;
having a wholesome extended support system of family and friends; and most
ironic, envy and rage in relation to the other parent's fantasied or actual
greater success in relating to their children in warm, comfortable, loving and
trusting ways.
It is this rage,
envy, and the wish to punish that we see most often in severe cases of Parental
Alienation Syndrome, with very
pathologically disturbed parents.
Psychological
"Allergic" Reactions to the Other Parent
We frequently see situations in which one
parent became psychologically dependent upon the other during the marriage.
Once separated and needing to break the dependency but fearful of the continued
power of dependency, such a dependent parent feels and urgent compulsion to
avoid the other parent as one avoids poison ivy. Feeling emotionally
"allergic" the dependent parent fears susceptibility to renewed
dependency. To avoid the allergen - namely the other parent - the dependent
parent attempts to achieve complete avoidance which, of course, is easier to
achieve if that parent can be kept out of the children's lives. The allergy
medicine - parentectomy - becomes the children's poison!
Prevention of
Parentectomy
The following recommendations on how to
prevent parentectomies may, in part, appear drastic. These prevention measures
which are presented in the spirit of suggestions, and based on clinical
experience, include:
1. Person contemplating marriage and
children should consider a proposed mate's tendency toward relying on the role
of being a parent as his or
her exclusive identity. Such persons may need to rely totally on full-time
control over the children for
identity following divorce.
2. One should try to fall in love with and
have children with a mate who has great empathy for children's needs and
feelings. A mother or father
with empathy who loves his or her children will usually not subject the
children to a parent removal.
3. One should not separate from one's mate
without a scheduled, structured,
legal
custody arrangement, in advance of parting the marital relationship.
4. Once separated, a parent should never
speak with and certainly should never see a mental health professional - other than a court appointed one - that he
or she has not helped choose in advance, and should further avoid like the plague a friendly-sounding
psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker, or counsellor, who calls and says he
or she wants to help the
parents and children through the pain of divorce. this is especially so when
that professional has already
seen the children and the other parent.
5. Parents should seek and hopefully find
attorneys not biased by the conviction that all children need a primary home
and a primary caretaker after
divorce.
6. The first moment it becomes clear that
scheduled custodial time with one's child is being consistently blocked, the parent so blocked should, run not
walk, with his or her attorney, to the nearest family court.
Conclusion
Many parents, mental health clinicians, and
attorneys have had contact with the process of parentectomy as a victim or as
someone close to a victim. Professionals must guide victims or potential
victims through the maze of legal, judicial, mental health and family processes
which can lead to the radical "surgery" of parent-erasure I call
parentectomy. Attempts at parentectomy create a psychological reign of terror,
for the intended parent and child-victims. Those victims who survive are
emotionally bloodied, bitter, war-torn, and exhausted. They often form and join
support groups with committed and caring persons in organisations to protect
their children and themselves, or to help others to protect their children and
themselves from the dreaded sequelae of parentectomy. Most parentectomy victims
and most of those who try to help such victims, experience a great deal of
chronic emotional pain.
I wish there were a
panacea to help reduce that pain. There is not. The author has shared his
experience and thinking around children and parents of divorce, in the hope
that increased understanding of the dynamics behind parentectomy, will help
clinicians, attorneys, judges and parents eradicate this most dreaded,
malevolent and destructive affliction of parents and children who love, care
for and need each other.