Psychological correction of a daughter's relationship with a separately living father when hindered by the mother: the family system in crisis
Introduction: Triangulation as a developmental trauma
The situation where the mother deliberately hinders the daughter's communication with the separately living father represents a classic case of pathological triangulation in the family system. The child, in this case the daughter, is drawn into the marital conflict, forced to choose a side and bear the overwhelming burden of loyalty. Psychological correction here is aimed not at "convincing" the child, but at reconstructing disrupted boundaries, reducing the level of anxiety, and restoring her right to love both parents without a sense of guilt. This is a comprehensive work that requires the involvement of a specialist (a family psychologist, child psychotherapist) and, ideally, a change in the mother's position.
The daughter, under pressure from the mother, may demonstrate a range of reactions described in the context of the Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS - a controversial but useful concept in describing dynamics):
Cognitive distortions: "Black-and-white" thinking: father - absolutely "bad", mother - "good". Discrediting past positive experiences with the father ("He never loved me").
Inauthentic, learned Rationalizations: The child gives disproportionate, adult, often memorized phrases to justify refusing to communicate ("He doesn't pay child support", "He destroyed our family"), which do not correspond to his age and emotional experience.
Reflex of "refuser": Manifestation of fear, aggression, or complete ignoring in the presence of the father, even if the relationship was warm previously. In a safe environment (alone with a psychologist), longing for the father may break through.
Somatic and anxiety symptoms: Enuresis, tics, sleep disturbances, school maladjustment, increased anxiety as a result of constant internal conflict and fear of losing the mother's love.
Important ethical point: A strict distinction between alienation (caused by one parent) and justified aversion (resulting from real abuse, violence, or neglect on the part of the father). Correction is appropriate only in the first case. In the second - trauma therapy is required.
The work is carried out step by step and requires a significant amount of time.
Confidential work with the daughter. Creating a safe space where she can express any feelings without fear of condemnation or "leakage" of information to the mother. Projective techniques (family drawing, fairy tales, sand play), play therapy are used.
Identification of the degree of influence and fears. What exactly does the mother say? What does the daughter fear losing if she shows interest in the father? ("Mom will stop loving me", "I will be a bad daughter").
Evaluation of resources. Preserved personal positive memories of the father, even minimal.
Legitimization of ambivalence. The psychologist helps to accept that it is possible to be angry at dad for leaving and miss him at the same time. That love for the father does not make the daughter a traitor to the mother.
Separation of marital and parental. Explanation in an accessible language: "Mom and dad stopped being husband and wife, but they will always remain your parents. Their fight is their adult problem, not yours."
Work with "imposed narratives". Help in distinguishing: "Is this your thought or someone else's?".
Interesting fact: In systemic family therapy, the technique of "circular interview" is used, where questions are not asked directly ("Do you love dad?"), but through the prism of relationships with others: "What do you think your grandmother (the father's mother) feels when she doesn't see you?" or "If your best friend had such a situation, what would you advise her?". This allows to bypass protective barriers and bring hidden meanings to the surface.
Explain the harm of triangulation to the daughter's psyche (risks of depression, problems in future relationships).
Work on her own grievances and fears (being alone, losing control, financial anxieties).
Focus on "my daughter's father" and her need for this connection.
If the mother refuses to cooperate, the strategy shifts to strengthening the daughter's inner world and using external resources:
Example from practice: In one case with a teenage girl who abruptly rejected her father after a divorce, the psychologist used the method of "a letter that is not sent". The girl was offered to write a letter to the father with all her grievances (an outburst of anger, induced by the mother), and then a second one, with those feelings she fears to show. During the writing of the second letter, she cried and admitted to being lonely and confused. This became a turning point, allowing to start a dialogue about real, not imposed feelings.
Psychological correction in this situation is essentially liberating work. Its goal is to take the daughter out of the role of an instrument, "ally" or therapist for the mother, and return her the right to her own, autonomous relationships with both parents. The success of correction is measured not by the immediate restoration of contact (this may take years), but by the reduction of the child's anxiety level, the appearance of her ability to talk about her feelings without fear, and the gradual formation of a more whole, not fragmented image of both parents. This is an investment in her mental health that will allow her to build her own relationships in the future, not reproducing the pathological model of conflict and manipulation. The task of the psychologist is to be that neutral, accepting adult who keeps the focus on the child's interests in a situation where adults often lose sight of them.
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