- The social worker’s report, delivered after a three month period of supervised contact, recorded that the father had demonstrated himself “able to meet the children’s needs positively and effectively”, that his discipline of the children was “wholly appropriate” and recommended a shared care arrangement with the children spending alternate weeks with each parent.
- Dr Morgan, who was ordered to carry out a psychological assessment of both parents, reported that the mother was “implacably opposed to father’s contact”.
- The children’s guardian agreed with Dr Morgan that the mother had acted so as to prevent the children from having a relationship with their father.
- Dr Misch, a child and adolescent psychiatrist, concluded that the mother had repeatedly sabotaged contact, that whilst the father had a propensity in the past to become angry and aggressive, he had successfully managed it and that the children would “benefit enormously from contact with their father”.
https://www.kingsleynapley.co.uk/insights/blogs/family-law-blog/parental-alienation-and-intractable-contact-disputes-when-all-seems-lost
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Author: Linda Turner
Coaching and Therapy
Currently studying Psychotherapy , Cognitive psychology, Hypnotherapy.
Qualified NLP, EMDR and CBT therapist.
REIKI Master.
I believe in truth, honesty and integrity! ≧◔◡◔≦
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