
Discover more from Overcome Parental Alienation
I broke a rib and am moving very slowly!
Earlier today, I broke one of my ribs in a freak accident. There is nothing quite like the pain of a broken rib to keep me up at night.
I will do my best to post Friday’s article during the weekend, or no later than Monday.
Recently, an online counselor berated me for not supporting the idea that as alienated parents our hope for a reunion with our kids is more likely to occur if we are primarily passive. I have to disagree with her position. Since this event occurred a few weeks ago, I have researched and found other professional counselors who support this garbage. In my view, the reunion percentage is so low that we, as alienated parents, are primarily passive. We chose this pathway due to many factors. The abusive parent is a known abuser, is manipulative, makes threats (implied and real), and most likely earns more money. We suffer immensely from mental trauma because we don’t want our children to be hurt; we don’t want to be hurt, put in jail on trumped-up lies, or to be tormented by the mental abuse our abuser knows how to inflict so well.
I’ll admit I don’t have all the answers for alienation, but I have the experience and wisdom to know that supporting a passive approach is, in most cases, the wrong approach.
I offered to debate the counselor across any live video platform and post the debate, and she refused to go live.
Future Posts
I’ve decided to use the platforms feature to schedule automatic posts each Friday around 8:00 AM EST and will prewrite four articles to stay ahead of Friday Morning releases.
Please share my work with others and thank you for understanding Today’s release.
Love is the greatest defender,
Darel L. Long
Image Credit: https://cdn.britannica.com/42/133742-050-16A33263/Human-rib-cage.jpg