Other ways of carrying out the process of alienation via programming and thereby brainwashing children can be seen by:
(a) Observing the behaviour and listening to the statements of children towards the alienated party.
(b) By noting the control the alienating parent seeks and obtains in order to eliminate the alienated parent.
(c) By noting the marital disharmony as well as the acrimony when the parents separated subsequently.
(d) By noting the contradictory statements and behaviour demonstrated by the programmed child when interviewed.
(e) By taking note of the character assaults which the alienating parent makes which are often not verifiable: eg. that the former partner is immoral, lacks parenting skills, drinks heavily, uses drugs, is emotionally unstable or unreliable or is dishonest, etc.
(f) By noting the unchildlike statements made which have been programmed by the alienating parent.
PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PAS) by L. F. LOWENSTEIN MA, Dip. Psych, PhD from JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Vol. 163 No. 3, 16 January 1999, p 47-50
(a) Observing the behaviour and listening to the statements of children towards the alienated party.
(b) By noting the control the alienating parent seeks and obtains in order to eliminate the alienated parent.
(c) By noting the marital disharmony as well as the acrimony when the parents separated subsequently.
(d) By noting the contradictory statements and behaviour demonstrated by the programmed child when interviewed.
(e) By taking note of the character assaults which the alienating parent makes which are often not verifiable: eg. that the former partner is immoral, lacks parenting skills, drinks heavily, uses drugs, is emotionally unstable or unreliable or is dishonest, etc.
(f) By noting the unchildlike statements made which have been programmed by the alienating parent.
PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PAS) by L. F. LOWENSTEIN MA, Dip. Psych, PhD from JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Vol. 163 No. 3, 16 January 1999, p 47-50