Transcriber: Toshiyuki Saito
Reviewer: Eunice Tan
I’d like you to imagine a father
struggling with a young child.
How quickly are you
to offer him assistance
than a mother doing the same thing?
She likely needs just as much help,
but we assume she’s got this covered
and he doesn’t know what he’s doing.
When we see a father
volunteering at school,
how would you rate his parenting abilities
compared to a mother doing the same thing?
Fathers often get gold stars
for doing anything fatherly,
while this behavior
is expected of mothers.
We use parenting stereotypes
on an everyday basis,
and we’re not often aware
of how they affect our perceptions.
Today, I’m going to ask you
to challenge your parenting stereotypes,
which are at the root
of a very serious problem
affecting millions of families worldwide.
This is not going be comfortable
for most of you.
We know that racial stereotypes
are very resistant to change,
and we learn those by age five.
Our parenting stereotypes are closely tied
to the traditional gender roles
of our parents,
and we learn those by age two.
Our parenting stereotypes contribute
to a problem known as parental alienation.
Parental alienation involves
a set of behaviours that one parent does
to damage, destroy, or sever
the relationship between
their children and the other parent.
These behaviors range widely
in their severity
and include things such as
bad-mouthing the other parent to the child
and making that child
afraid to be with that parent.
Many parents who are alienated
are falsely accused of abuse
as a strategy to get custody.
Psychologists have
long documented these behaviors
among divorced, separated,
and even intact families.
And parental alienation
does not discriminate.
It affects same sex
and different sex relationships.
It affects people of all racial groups,
economic and income levels.
Many parents, grandparents, step-parents,
and extended family members
are affected by this problem.
Based on my research, I estimate
about 13% of parents in this room
have been targets of parental alienation.
That’s over 22 million
American adults alone.
Some people have characterized
parental alienation
as a form of child abuse,
and the impact on children is severe.
Children consider both parents
important for their identity.
And when they’re led to believe
that one part of their identity is bad
or doesn’t love them,
this has disastrous consequences
for their development.
Many alienated children
develop psychological disorders,
suffer academic decline,
and have an inability to develop
healthy relationships themselves.
Many are suicidal.
But parental alienation
is a form of indirect aggression.
The true target of this aggression
is the other parent,
and children are their weapons.
Therefore, parental alienation
is a form of domestic violence.
And the impact on the targeted parent
is also severe.
Imagine your child suddenly believing
horrible things about you,
told by the other parent.
Trying to correct them
will not change their opinion of you
and, in fact, typically pushes them
closer to the alienator.
Many parents that I've interviewed
have not seen or spoken
to their children in years.
This is a form of unresolvable grief.
And we often think that this is a problem
between two parents who cannot get along,
and it’s not.
It’s typically one-sided.
Yet many parents I’ve interviewed
have sought court intervention
to help them,
and the judges tell them
to kiss and make up,
play nice.
We don’t tell victims of bullying
to go and shake hands
with their bully on the playground.
It doesn’t work that way.
Parents can use parenting stereotypes
to alienate their children
very effectively.
For example,
if a divorced mother tells you
that the father of her children
doesn’t care about them
and this is why he doesn’t ever see them,
how quickly are you to believe this?
It’s very easy to alienate fathers
from their children
because we have very negative
stereotypes about them:
they're deadbeat dads,
they’re abusive,
they’re absentee parents.
Many alienated fathers I have interviewed
have told me that their once-close
friends and neighbors
suddenly believed
horrible things about them
without hearing their side of the story.
It’s very easy to alienate mothers
when we can show that they are unmotherly.
For example,
if a mother leaves work early
to pick up her children,
how would you rate
her abilities as a parent
compared to a father doing the same thing?
Mothers who violate traditional
gender stereotypes are often punished.
She’s not seen as a good employee
if she has to leave work early
to pick up her children,
and she’s not seen
as a good mother if she works.
In fact, young children
rate mothers who work
as less effective parents
than those who do not,
even when their own mothers work.
That’s how deeply ingrained
these stereotypes are.
I’ve interviewed many mothers
who were alienated from their children,
who were the breadwinners
of their families.
And when they divorce,
this was used against them,
with claims that she only cared
about her career and not her children.
If a father tells you that the mother
of his child has a mental illness
and is unable to care for that child,
how quickly do you believe that?
Claims about mental illness,
such as depression,
are easily applied to women,
and these labels are harder to shake
for mothers than for fathers.
So fathers can alienate very effectively
if they can show that they are exemplary -
which is not hard to do,
because we do not expect much of them
in the first place -
and if they can show that the mother
is not motherly enough.
Our rigid parenting stereotypes
are hurting children and families.
Our parenting stereotypes
also impact how we perceive
policy solutions to this problem.
As an example, we can look
to equal parenting initiatives,
which have been proposed
as a way to address parental alienation
by distributing custody 50/50 time
with both parents.
These initiatives have proposed or imply
that both parents
are important to a child.
Anthropologists and psychologists
have long documented
that mothers and fathers
are important for a child’s development.
We know, also, the outcomes for children,
such as mental, emotional,
and educational outcomes,
are better when parenting
is shared after a divorce.
Only when a parent is proven to be abusive
or inadequate in some substantial way
would a 50/50 distribution not be applied.
Yet nearly all equal parenting initiatives
across over a dozen US states and Canada
have been defeated.
Why?
One explanation or one argument
against these initiatives
is that this would allow
fathers who are abusive
to further abuse
their children and the mothers.
Having personal experience
with domestic violence,
I initially agreed
with this argument at face value.
But then I started
to think twice about it.
There are fathers who are abusive
and alienate their children,
but there are many fathers who are not
and do not alienate their children.
My initial agreement with that argument
reflected an underlying
prejudice that I had
that men and fathers are aggressive.
And to deny equal rights to children
for all fathers because some are abusive
is discrimination.
I had to rise above my prejudices
to see this problem more objectively.
And I asked myself,
"What percentage
of mothers who are abusive
also alienate their children?"
I had to learn a lot
about human aggression
when I was researching my new book.
And what I learned
challenged many of the beliefs that I have
about humans and aggression.
I also learned that many mothers
and fathers who are targets of alienation
were also victims of domestic violence.
We do have valid and reliable methods
of assessment for abuse
to protect children and family members
who are victims of domestic violence.
We rarely use them.
But we could use them
and demand that our institutions
require certification and training
of custody evaluators to use them
while still protecting the rights
of parents to their children,
and not have discriminatory practices.
Some have argued
that equal parenting initiatives
are just a fathers' rights issue,
but I disagree.
It’s a social justice issue.
When my sons grow up some day
and if they choose to have children,
they won’t have the same rights
to their children as a mother does
unless we do something.
So how can we change
our parenting stereotypes
to fix this problem?
Let’s say we do nothing.
And you meet Casey and Addison,
who were married for five years
and had a child, Dakota.
After filing for divorce,
Casey tells everyone
that Addison abused Dakota
and had a mental illness
and offered no proof
for these accusations.
Casey is awarded custody of Dakota,
and Dakota sees Addison
every other weekend.
Casey consistently tells Dakota
that Addison is a bad
and dangerous parent.
Dakota, when expressing feelings
of longing and sadness
for not seeing Addison -
Casey responds to this
with just sadness and disappointment
and feeling upset.
Friends, neighbors, teachers
all believe Casey’s accusations
that Addison is a bad parent
because they confirm
their parental expectations.
Dakota sees these
adults' avoidance of Addison
as proof that Addison is a bad parent
and starts to experience extreme anxiety.
Meanwhile, Addison tries to make the most
of parenting time with Dakota
but starts to feel more
and more disconnected.
Addison feels isolated,
depressed, and at times, suicidal.
Let me ask you:
what gender did you assign
to Casey and Addison?
How did your parenting stereotypes
affect how you perceive this family?
Now, let’s say you change
your parenting stereotypes,
and we change our policies and laws
to address this problem more effectively.
Casey files for divorce
and still tells everyone
that Addison has abused Dakota
and has a mental illness.
A thorough custody evaluation is done
with valid assessments of abuse.
The custody evaluator determines
that the allegations made about Addison
were false and a strategy to get custody.
Casey's awarded a fine
and ordered to attend parenting classes.
Equal custody is assigned
to Casey and Addison.
Casey still tells Dakota that Addison
is a bad and dangerous parent.
However, when Dakota is with Addison,
there is evidence that this is not true.
When Casey says that you shouldn’t feel
sad and upset and lonely
when you're with Addison,
Dakota spends time with Addison
and expresses their feelings openly
about how they feel connected
to that parent.
Neighbors, friends, teachers
all question Casey’s allegations
that Addison is a bad parent
because they see that Addison
has Dakota 50% of the time
and is an involved parent.
Dakota still experiences loyalty conflicts
when with both parents.
Casey still has a very negative
portrayal about Addison.
But Dakota has a loving relationship
with both parents and is doing okay.
Note in both of these stories -
the motives of the alienator
do not change,
the behaviors do not change.
But what changes are our parenting
expectations and stereotypes.
And they have a strong impact
and minimize the damage
done by the alienator.
We cannot change our laws and policies
about parental alienation
until we start changing
our parenting stereotypes.
Most of us know someone
who’s a victim or a perpetrator
of parental alienation.
Please learn more about this problem,
and don’t be a bystander
when you see it happening.
Let’s all work together
to protect the best interests of a child
in the way that it's really
in their best interest.
Thank you.
(Applause)
