The most beautiful people we have known are those who have known defeat, known suffering, known struggle, known loss, and have found their way out of the depths. These persons have an appreciation, a sensitivity, and an understanding of life that fills them with compassion, gentleness, and a deep loving concern. Beautiful people do not just happen.
-- Elisabeth Kübler-Ross
There's a new kind of person emerging within our
communities today, a person with qualities and characteristics that can only be
gotten from a unique kind of struggle, a person who has been fire-tested, shown
to be of steel, and emerged from the other side of this struggle scarred a
little, burned a little, but stronger than ever and focused like no one else.
These are PA Parents, or parental alienation
parents, and their stories are endless, heart wrenching, and heartbreaking:
- There's
the grandfather with one dying wish to see his alienated grandchildren before
he dies.
- Or the
father from out West who's driving his family cross country with an emblem on the back of the family van depicting his alienated child. Along the way he gives TV
and radio interviews to bring attention to parental alienation.
- There's
the mother who wants a to hold a funeral or memorial service for her alienated
daughter so she can get some closure to her life because she knows she'll
probably never see her daughter again.
- The mother from down South who's in the process of hanging herself in her
garage but stops at the last minute when she notices her daughter's red wagon
on the floor.
- And
there's the father from the Midwest who drives around his small town looking at
groups of kids gathered on street corners to see if one of them might by chance
be his daughter who he hasn't seen in four years.
And then there are the celebrities who are
starting to bring national attention to this tragedy by sharing their own
alienation stories. Lita Ford and the Jason Patric are just the latest to use their celebrity
status to bring awareness to parental alienation.
But mostly it's ordinary parents, many of whom
are gathered in online support groups where they get support, give advice, and
share their stories about how they've lost their children, as best they know how this happened.
But they all know this much: they all know that
they've been pushed out of their children's lives, not by divorce, not by court
orders, not by visitation denials or custody revocations or even the
termination of their parental rights. They've been pushed out by something much
more devastating, much more destructive, and much more permanent. Their loss
has been orchestrated by someone whose actions – while remaining hidden from
the public and immune from prosecution – have permitted them to inflict the
most pain possible onto a loving parent by manipulating his children into
believing he's not only unlikable, but despicable, hate-worthy, and to use a
word my daughter starting used just weeks after our relationship ended, pathetic.
And yet these parents are none of these things.
But you wouldn't know that by listening to their ex-spouse or even their
children talk about them. They have nothing but the worst things to say about
them.
And that's the problem. These targeted parents
have done nothing to deserve this kind of rejection except be loving
and caring parents. And ironically, it's often their passion for their parenting that becomes the reason they're targeted by a vindictive ex-spouse.
Parental alienation is all about one parent causing another parent the most
pain possible, and what better way to do this then by making their children hate
them.
And yet, even in the face of these relentless
attacks on their character, PA
parents remain loving, caring, and committed to their children. Even through
the silent rejection, the total abandonment, and the long lonely days of
solitude, they forge ahead fighting to reconnect with their children.
And this only makes them stronger.
But seeing them only as stronger doesn't quite
come close to fleshing out the daunting purpose that has become them. It
doesn't quite describe the gravitas and depth they embody
from the emotional nightmare they've chosen to endure. They're stronger, no
doubt, and reborn as well; but they also have an added sense of purpose that
has become their new life
And it is a new life.
Because you take on new life when you've been to
the edge of a precipice the likes of which have only been seen by parents who
have literally had their children abducted from their homes – like Elizabeth
Smart's parents or Jacob Wetterling's.
You take on a new life when your whole family
has been swept away overnight, which is exactly what the parental alienation
experience feels like.
PA parents have had their roots pulled up and
their foundations demolished. The only family many have ever known is taken
from them in a few short months. Victims of severe parental alienation
experience the same trauma that parents who have lost their children to
kidnapping experience. The differences are negligible. Their experience is
the same in nearly every way.
And in many ways, for PA parents it's worse. And
I realize this is hard to believe.
But for them, their emptiness encompasses a reach
unimaginable to most of us. They cycle through the stages of grief continuously
because there's no closure to their loss.
It's worse for PA parents because they lack the
reassuring comfort of family and friends. There's no community of caring folk
to check in on them or who understand what they're going through. There's no
comforting hand on their shoulders when they're crying from looking at
photographs of their children. There are no professionals to listen and guide
them.
It's worse for PA parents because they're often
in sight of their children and are forced to watch the twisted and tortuous
bending of their children's minds -- something only the most demonic sadist
could design. They have no choice but to stand by and watch these little people
who were once part of their lives, turn into strangers who no longer recognize
them.
It's worse for PA parents because they have to listen to
their children coldly tell them that they no longer want them in their lives --
parents who just months before were caring for them, comforting them, reading
to them, and living with them. These parents experience a rejection that can
literally cause dissociative symptoms so severe that they require
hospitalization. Their children turn their backs on them and walk away as if
they never knew them. (This is hard to imagine, but it happens. When my
daughter told me she never wanted me in her life again, I honestly thought she
was joking. But she wasn't.)
It's worse for PA Parents because this
constellation of pain, known as parental alienation, fits the textbook
definition of blaming the victim better than nearly anything else.
Alienated parents not only lose their children, family, and friends, but they
are usually blamed for causing these losses, as if in some hellish nether-world-way-of-thinking
they actually deserve this.
What Doesn't Kill Us
PA Parents have experienced a time alone in the desert, a
hellish period that has changed their lives in unimaginable and incomprehensible
ways. Where the line between wanting to live and not has become thinner and
thinner and blurrier and blurrier. We've all been there. All of us PA parents
have felt the fate of being forgotten and lived a sadness so immense that it
oozed from every pore in our bodies.
And as days dragged on and we dragged ourselves
out of bed each morning, wishing it had all been a bad dream, we continued on
anyway, dazed and going through life in a trance, somehow getting used
to this new foreign land that became our new world without children.
Rose Kennedy knew about loss more than most and had this to
say about it:
"It has been said, 'time heals all wounds.' I do not agree. The wounds remain. In time, the mind, protecting its sanity, covers them with scar tissue and the pain lessens. But it is never gone."
Like Rose Kennedy, we also have scar tissue. Our
healing process is a long and tortuous one and it doesn't happen overnight. Nor is it easily understood.
We describe our emotional wounds as scars. We
have calluses, maybe of the heart. And while were gracious for sentiments from
family and friends, we half admit – ad nauseam – that these hollow platitudes
never quite measure up to the experience they're meant to pacify.
We don't always know what has happened to us,
internally, and is still happening to us, now. How it has changed us. Is still
changing us. We're an unknown in the medical profession. We've had more than a
double whammy. As parents we've been abused as much as our children, and most
of us feel like we've been stripped of everything, discarded on the ash heap,
and left to rot as damaged goods. Because, essentially, we have.
Internally we bleed emotionally for our children
as much as we do for the self we lost. And we erect elaborate rationalizations
about how we're better off now, how we're our old selves once again, and how we're
back to normal all the while hiding from the fact that we're hiding from life,
or the past, or running from it, or running from any past. Because our lizard
brain only knows to fear the past, any past, and we let him do this.
And so we find ourselves on any given day in upside-down, emotionally mixed-up worlds:
And so we find ourselves on any given day in upside-down, emotionally mixed-up worlds:
On
a summer evening near a baseball park, a bat cracks, cheers ring out, and a
strange and fleeting memory-remnant shoots through our nervous system jolting
us into temporary pain.
On a winter day full of sun and melting snow, a sudden wave of feeling from
an undefined time blows through our goose-bump frail body quickly turning
us into to bile-sick, feeble invalids keeling us over with memories of
our lost child.
Or on
a windy fall day near a neighborhood park, squeaky playground swings and
children's laughter triggers long-forgotten emotions we thought were buried and we double over, stop in our tracks, and are once again immobilized.
But we catch ourselves up. Reel from the pain.
Reel from acknowledging there is pain, and turn away to trudge on forcing a
forgetfulness of what we've left behind, of that which has just flashed before
our eyes, believing everything's fine.
Because it's all we can do.
Because it's all we can do.
And we continue the fight for our children with
every fiber of our being.
Because we're PA parents and you've yet to hear our roar.
Because we're PA parents and you've yet to hear our roar.
20 comments:
This piece of writing is deeply moving and captures the essence of having ones child ripped from ones life.
Thank you very much. I appreciate that. - John
Thank you for putting my dear husband's thoughts into words.
You're most welcome. It's a true story for many parents.
Yes thank you for this wonderful piece of writing - it describes exactly how I feel. God bless you.
this is a really amazing piece, John. You capture the elements of PTSD we all experience. Any normal day can be emotionally disrupted by the otherwise ambiguous sounds you described. We all have different ones, and some of the same ones I'm sure.
I am so very sorry for your pain...thank you so very much for your beautifully descriptive and heartfelt words of PA...I pray I never grow too numb....
Thank you for the comments.
My boyfriend is facing the same situation, it is so sad to see a loving man be treated like that. I wish someone othe PA parent could speak with him, it is possible that there is nothing to do? How can I help him, what should I do or say? John, keep your faith alive, your daugther needs you and she will be back to you. We have to believe this is not the end
I can relate so well to this pain & attempts to survive it. Another torment is seeing your child having to be put on medications to survive "the worst form of child abuse." I hope our communities, whose help we depend on, will read this, but it seems most blame & judge moms who are alienated.
Thank you for so eloquently putting into words what is so difficult to explain. Can't believe this could happen to me
Will continue to follow your posts
Sending this to my local newspaper and hoping all others do the same.
Wow. Thanks.
Thank you for putting this into words. I am a mum and 3 of my babies have been alienated.
Please can I use this to help in gaining recognition for PA?
Yes, you can use this.
Wow....I am amazed at how you captured the exact feelings I have. I have been alienated from my children since June 28, 2012 and every day has seemed like a nightmare. A nightmare that doesn't seem to stop. Thank you for writing this.
Thank you all for the comments. It is a nightmare that doesn't stop. There's no closure and you and your children remain in a state of suspended animation, or something. People need to get this.
i have people tell me all he time to get over it and move on.but i am not able to.funny thing is they would not be able to if they had the same situation.it is a constant draining of life that just never ends no matter what. it is hard to imagine what life would be like if it was not happening. one day i hope to find out. excellent choice of words my brother.
Thank you.
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