In social psychology and legal anthropology, the figure of the "trickster" — an archetypal violator of boundaries and rules — finds an unexpected manifestation in highly conflicted family disputes. This refers to the strategies of a parent (often the mother due to sociocultural predispositions) who formally agrees with the court's decision on the father's communication with the child, but actually sabotages its implementation through a complex system of manipulations and covert resistance. This phenomenon represents a serious problem for law enforcement, child psychology, and the protection of parental rights.
The sabotage of the enforcement of a court decision by the mother-trickster is characterized not by direct disobedience, but by an intricate avoidance of responsibility. It can be classified into three main tactics ("three P's"):
Passive Resistance. The mother creates "logistical" barriers: sudden illnesses of the child on the day of visits, being busy with additional activities, messages about psychological discomfort. The child may "forget" about the visit, be unprepared for the father's arrival. Historically, this tactic resembles the practice of "civil disobedience" in another context, where the executor formally does not violate the law, but makes its implementation impossible.
Programming the Child. A more subtle and harmful method. The mother forms a negative image of the father in the daughter through "innocent" comments ("dad abandoned us", "he is always busy with something else"), creates an atmosphere of anxiety around visits ("how will I worry!"), or uses the "excusing" tactic, asking leading questions after communication ("were you not treated badly? were you scared?"). An interesting fact: such behavior in foreign judicial practice (USA, Canada) is known as "Parental Alienation" (parental alienation behavior) and can serve as a basis for a review of custody.
Procedural Tricksterism. The mother uses legal mechanisms to drag out and complicate the process: files endless motions to change the communication order, appeals decisions, initiates new lawsuits (for alimony, for challenging paternity), requires repeated psychological-pedagogical examinations, citing "new circumstances". This turns the law into a tool of war, not protection of the child's interests.
The key harm is inflicted on the child. The daughter finds herself in a state of "loyalty conflict" — a rift between the feeling of love for both parents and the necessity to choose a side for survival in the mother's psychological field. This leads to anxiety disorders, depression, manipulative behavior, and distorted models of future relationships. From the perspective of the mother's motivation, driving forces are often not so much the child's interests as unprocessed resentment, revenge, fear of losing control and the only significant social role, as well as economic reasons (fear of reducing alimony payments when the father actively participates).
The legal paradox lies in the fact that the system aimed at direct disobedience (fines for non-compliance) often turns out to be helpless in the face of sophisticated, indirect sabotage, where the mother formally "is not guilty" — "the child does not want to".
Combating such sabotage requires systemic efforts and a shift from emotional reaction to strategic planning.
1. Legal Level: Documentation and Specialized Lawsuits.
It is necessary to keep a meticulous journal of all cases of broken visits, indicating dates, reasons provided by the mother, and your actions. Record all communications (save SMS, emails, use audio recording of visits where legally permissible). This is evidence. Next, instead of fruitless complaints about non-compliance, it is necessary to act on the offensive:
Initiate a comprehensive psychological-pedagogical examination that may detect the presence of pressure on the child and his real attachments.
File a lawsuit to determine the child's residence with the father based on systematic sabotage of communication and the use of the child in the conflict. In the practice of some countries (for example, Australia), such behavior is considered a form of psychological abuse of the child and is a significant argument.
Request the appointment of an institution for accompanying the enforcement of the court decision (a court bailiff for family disputes, a specialized social worker), who will be present at the transfer of the child and record the situation.
2. Psychological Level: Restoration and Building Relationships.
It is crucial for the father to extricate the daughter from the conflict field. During visits, it is important to:
Absolutely avoid negative statements about the mother, questions, and pressure.
Create a stable, safe, and predictable communication environment, focusing on the child's interests and feelings.
Seek help from a child psychologist with experience working with highly conflicted families and the alienation of parent syndrome. The psychologist's conclusion is a strong evidence in court.
3. Procedural-Tactical Level.
Insist on the maximum detail of the court decision: not just "every second Saturday", but precise time, place of transfer, order of informing about illnesses, rules for departure. This deprives the trickster of maneuvering space.
Propose to the court to introduce penalty sanctions (astreints) for each violation, regardless of the reason, if it is not confirmed by documents (a doctor's note for illness). This changes the economy of sabotage.
Conclusion: From Conflict to a System of Child Protection
Counteracting the sabotage of the mother-trickster is not a battle with an individual, but work with a system of dysfunction. It requires the father, his lawyers, and involved experts to translate covert, manipulative resistance into formal, provable violations that the judicial system can recognize and suppress.
Success lies not in emotional confrontation, but in the professionalization of the approach: legal documentation, psychological literacy, and persistent demands on state institutions to fulfill their function — to protect the child's right to communicate with both parents and their right to raise their child, regardless of the personal conflict of adults. Ultimately, the struggle is not for time, but for the daughter's right to a whole, unharmed by conflict identity and for the restoration of justice, which the court's decision embodies in this situation.
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