This post is for mothers who are rejected by their children after divorce and separation due to coercive control by fathers. It is intended to help mothers to hold boundaries when a controlling ex is manipulating the children’s understanding of their relationship with their mother. It is for mothers of children at all ages including adults. I will write the accompanying article, which is for fathers whose children are being enmeshed (and thereby controlled) by their mothers, next week.
Alienation of children caused by coercive control
Children who reject their mothers after divorce or separation, in circumstances where they are showing hyper attachment to their father, are likely to be suffering from psychological splitting, (Woodall, 2019). The polarisation of the child’s behaviour into strong alignment with a father and rejection of a mother, particularly where the rejection is accompanied by contempt and disdain, are symptomatic of splitting, which is an infantile defence induced in the child by the control strategies of a parent (in the case of this article, a father).
In most cases of rejection of mothers, the coercive control strategies which are used to influence the child, have been witnessed by the child prior to the dissolution of the family, leading the child to mimic the abusive behaviour of the father against the mother.(Bancroft, Silverman, & Ritchie, 2012) This means that the child is likely to be experiencing a defence called ‘identification with the aggressor.‘
Many people wonder why a child who has been witness to domestic abuse in the form of coercive control or physical violence, aligns with the aggressive parent and not the victim parent, especially when there has been a pattern of abuse from father to mother prior to the separation.(Stark, 2007). The defence of identification with the aggressor explains this dynamic well and it is worth understanding it if working with rejected mothers because it will help in assisting mothers to feel heard and supported.
Identification with the Aggressor
Identification with the aggressor, as a defense mechanism, was introduced by Anna Freud in her book “The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense” (1936). This concept describes a situation in which an individual, who feels threatened or powerless, unconsciously identifies with the aggressor as a means of coping or defending against the threat. By adopting the qualities of the aggressor, the person may experience a temporary relief from anxiety or gain a sense of control in the face of the perceived danger.
Anna Freud proposed that identification with the aggressor can be seen in various contexts, such as in cases of traumatic experiences, abusive relationships, or situations where individuals find themselves in oppressive or coercive environments. This defense mechanism serves as a psychological strategy for managing fear and preserving a sense of self.
Children who ‘identify’ with the aggressive or controlling parent
The identification which is described is forced upon a child due to the double bind position of being terrorised by an aggressive parent who they have witnessed harming their mother. The identification is not conscious but is a defence which protects the child from fear of being harmed by the parent in the same way. In such situations, children can become aggressive with their mother, act as spies for their father and mimic their father’s behaviour when they are in the care of their mother. For mothers whose children begin to ‘identify’ with the person who has abused them, the experience of rejection by their children becomes an intensely frightening experience because they are powerless to protect their children as they watch them being manipulated.
Induced Psychological Splitting
Even when children who reject their mothers are protected from an abusive father they may continue to identify with him and say that they love him and want to live with him. They may continue to reject their mother and escalate their allegations against her. On closer assessment, such children remain in the split state of mind, which is a defence which has been caused by fear of the father’s retribution. Such children are trauma bonded to their father and it can require significant protection, long periods of time and careful therapeutic work to liberate them from this state of mind.
How children are coerced to reject their mother
Rejection of mothers is an increasing problem seen at the Family Separation Clinic and clinical case studies demonstrate that the increase appears alongside a greater degree of shared care. That is not to say that shared care as such causes the problem of children’s rejection, (it only requires a few minutes for a determined manipulative parent to cause splitting in a child), but the increase in shared care certainly does not decrease the potential for children aligning with one parent and rejecting the other in clinical practice.
Many cases of rejection of mothers seen at the Family Separation Clinic, occur early in the separation, which suggests that control strategies are employed as a continuum of behaviours seen in the marriage. When fathers are rejected by children, it appears in clinical case notes, that the onset of children’s rejection coincides with either, the repartnering of their mother and/or the age and stage of development of the child. When FSC is instructed in Court to work with mothers who are rejected, there are a wide range of variables, including trans-national spousal abandonment cases which have a particular cultural dynamic in addition to coercive control and a clear pattern which shows eldest daughters becoming spousified and sons copying their fathers in their behaviour towards their mother.
Behavioural patterns
The behavioural patterns seen in children who reject mothers include challenging boundaries, refusing to comply with requests, threats, humiliation of their mother and denigration. Mothers report their children copying the behaviours seen in their fathers and control issues when arriving home from time with their father. Many mothers report a rapid onset of splitting in which the child refuses to see the mother, this is clinically different to many children who take longer to reject their father and appears to be related to the intense fear that some children feel in the care of a manipulative father, which is subsumed into a pattern of trying to regulate his behaviour.
Mother resilience and capacity to hold boundaries
Unfortunately many mothers have little awareness of the risk of onset of psychological splitting in their children, which appears frightening and bewildering at the same time. Because of the rapid onset in mother rejection, many lose complete contact with their children within a very short time. Manipulation of the child’s view of the mother, can mean that small issues are blown up into trigger events in which the child utilises a nondescript event as a reason to withdraw from a mother completely. Due to low resilience in mothers who have suffered domestic abuse, the capacity to hold boundaries in the face of challenging behaviours in children is often compromised, meaning that mothers find themselves having to placate rather than regulate and compromise rather than holding necessary boundaries. Children who are being manipulated in circumstances where a mother is anxious about boundaries, can easily overwhelm them, leaving a mother powerless in the face of her children as well as her abusive ex partner.
Building mother resilience in preparation for removing father control
To build resilience in rejected mothers, their own reactive splitting must be addressed in order that they are able to hold boundaries. Reactive splitting is a defensive strategy which is experienced unconsciously by all rejected parents, it causes parents to split off parts of self which are shamed and blamed in order to cope with the horrific experience of being rejected by a child without reason. Reactive splitting leads to complex post traumatic stress disorder and in my experience, many mothers who are living long term with rejection are suffering unknowingly with this.
Mothers are often terrified that holding boundaries will lead to complete loss of the child, a terror which is reduced when an understanding of what has happened and how it has happened is developed. Making sense of trauma is one of the cornerstones of recovery from it and when mothers understand attachment theory and its place within the recovery route for children who suffer from psychological splitting, they are empowered to learn the skills to hold boundaries, set expectations, manage children’s challenges and ulitmately place themselves in a healthy position to help their children. Boundary holding is essential when working with children who are suffering from induced psychological splitting because it is the violation of inter-personal boundaries which has caused the pressure on the child in the first place. Overwhelming inter-personal boundaries is an abusive strategy, especially after divorce and separation and so learning to hold a boundary and to recognise that manipulated children are suffering from attachment maladaptations is a key learning point for mothers.
Boundary setting is the first corner stone for assisting children who are rejecting a mother to recover, this is because through boundary setting the child is (re)introduced to healthy parenting and can encounter their mother in a stronger psychological position. Whilst some will be unable to set boundaries because their child(ren) are currently in a completely withdrawn state of mind (some of these children who enter into long term rejection of their mothers are seen to suffer themselves with personality disorders due to having had to make continuous attachment maladaptations during the phase in which personality is developing), many mothers will encounter and re-encounter their children over periods in which their children appear and then disappear. Learning how attachment maladapations cause this pattern of behaviours and how to manage when children do appear, brings significant relief to mothers because it empowers them to understand what they can do when children appear. Here is an example of how to manage children with attachment maladaptations when they re-appear in your life.
Too close/Too far away
Children who have been induced to use psychological splitting as a defence have been pushed back into an infantile state of mind, this prevents them from being able to develop more mature behaviours and more mature defences. Therefore when they reappear, they can appear to come very close to you, demanding to be let back into your life and often wanting to come and live with you. If a child with attachment maladaptations is allowed to come too close to quickly, they will overwhelm your personal boundaries, meaning that you will become terrified to set boundaries later in case that pushes them away. When children have suffered from psychological splitting they need to be helped to understand that other people have boundaries and whilst they are loved and welcomed, there are rules in the house which everyone follows to ensure that the family system works well. Setting boundaries with a returning child is very important and it is important to do it right from the outset so that the child can refind their place in a healthy environment. Children in these circumstances often ‘ping pong’ back and forth between parents during their teenage years due to the splitting defence which doesn’t allow for any ambivalence in relationships. Thus, if a child switches allegiance away from a controlling parent to the parent they have been rejecting, if they are enabled to overwhelm the boundary of the rejected parent they will echo the control strategies of the parent they have switched away from. To prevent this and to allow the child to be able to properly resolve the splitting, a parent in the rejected position must be able to set boundaries and expect reasonable behaviour and maintain those boundaries until the child internalises the new expectation.
Too close/too far away refers to the behaviour of children with attachment maladaptations who will come too close only to disappear again. These children need mothers who are primed to be therapeutic parents when they are emerging from the post separation control by fathers, in order that the liberation from inter-generational patterns of abuse are properly interrupted.
References
Bancroft, Lundy & Silverman, J.G. & Ritchie, Daniel. (2012). The Batterer as Parent: Addressing the Impact of Domestic Violence on Family Dynamics. 10.4135/9781452240480.
Freud, A. (1936). The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense. In The Writings of Anna Freud (Vol. 2, pp. 3-191). New York, NY: International Universities Press.
Dear Reader
This writing is from the perspective of psychological work with families not from the ideological women’s rights perspective. As such it deals with the underlying psychology of abuse rather than approaching it simply from the perspective of belief in a ‘patriarchal society.’
Approaching this issue from a psychological perspective means that mothers can learn how to provide healthy care for their children. One of the real problems for rejected mothers is the fragility of their self worth due to the harm which is caused by abuse. Instead of encouraging children to support their mothers in these circumstances, or behave as if mother and children are ‘a team’ (itself a boundary violation), the Clinic supports mothers to build an understanding of what happened to them, an understanding of attachment maladaptations and the skill to use therapeutic parenting to heal their children from a position of empowerment in parenting skills and ability to manage challenging behaviours. This is the route which ultimately breaks the inter-generational cycle of power and control behaviours in families.
Fathers
I began this article by saying that I will write about boundary holding by fathers in the rejected position and I will do so next week. It is important that I write differently for mothers and fathers because the underlying dynamics are often very different although the experience of being rejected is of course, very similar for both sexes.
Family Separation Clinic News
Watch on demand
A new series of watch on demand videos on therapeutic parenting, C-PTSD and more will be ready for you shortly and I will post links here when they are available.
Holding up a Healthy Mirror
Due to overwhelming demand, I have decided to to run HUAHM live again from the end of September. Bookings open shortly.
Higher Level Understanding for UK and Europe & Australia/New Zealand
HLU will run in the mornings from October 2024 for all participants who have completed HUAHM.
California Intensive
This four day workshop will be delivered by Karen and Nick Woodall with colleagues specialised in attachment trauma and bodywork for recovery from trauma. Dates are 26/27/28/29th January 2024, places are limited to 45 and bookings open shortly. Please note: If you have expressed an interest in attending this workshop you will receive notification as soon as the booking site is open.





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