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I feel nauseous having this text interaction with my oldest sister. She ended it by stating, "I can't be empathetic to your feelings" and I replied, "no shit".


OMG... I go right back to Step One... I think I will always recycle back to Step One. I think (???) most people do. Guess that's a question for my sponsor. It's bad enough that it's my kids but it's entire family that just non-stop silences me and throws me away like I'm nothing. Yes, I'm tired of it... AND again why I need Step One and Parental Alienation Anonymous.


STEP ONE of Parental Alienation Anonymous

We admitted we were powerless over PEOPLE (Our alienator, our children and any other relationships)—that our lives had become unmanageable.


PRIOR TO Parental Alienation Anonymous:

Before Parental Alienation Anonymous (PA-A), we kept ourselves busy seeking solutions for the alienator (child, parent, spouse, etc.). When what we were trying to accomplish wasn’t succeeding, we told ourselves to work harder or to try something else. We may even have told ourselves; it was our fault if we couldn’t convince the alienator (child, parent, spouse, etc.) to get help. If we could only find the right words at the right time, relayed in just the right tone of voice, then maybe we could get the alienator to see things our way. 

Desperate to fulfill our dreams for a happy family life, we thought that devoting all our energy to the problem was the answer. Little did we know we were actually contributing to the problem by trying to force solutions.


IN PAA WE LEARN:

  • That nothing we say or do can cause or stop someone else’s ALIENATING behavior.

  • We are not responsible for another person’s disease or recovery from it.

  • Not to suffer because of the actions or reactions of other people

  • Not to allow ourselves to be used or abused by others in the interest of another’s recovery

  • Not to do for others what they can do for themselves

  • Not to manipulate situations so others will be nice, eat, go to bed, get up, pay bills, or behave as we see fit

  • Not to cover up for another’s mistakes or misdeeds

  • Not to create a crisis

  • Not to prevent a crisis if it is in the natural course of events

  • By learning to focus on ourselves, our attitudes and well-being improve. We allow the alienators in our lives to experience the consequences of their own actions.

 

In Parental Alienation Anonymous (PA-A), we learn that we didn’t cause the alienation in our lives, we can’t control it, and we can’t cure it. If we are trying to force solutions, we can remember “Easy Does It.” Though we can’t expect our lives to always be easy, the slogan suggests that everything doesn’t have to be so hard all the time either. “Easy Does It” reminds us to be gentle with ourselves.

 

We don’t have to try harder or do better. We have tried long and hard enough. Though we may not be able to change the alienator (child, parent, spouse, etc.), we discover there is one person we can change – ourselves.

We learn to address the stress, fear, anxiety, powerlessness and hopelessness that parental alienation causes, we slowly start to regain our balance and learn how to embrace life under these incredibly trying circumstances. It is a process, not an event

 

Recovery means living life on life’s terms, facing pains and fears. In our alienation, we sometimes felt like helpless victims.

Recovery means gaining or regaining the power to see our options, to make careful choices in our lives.

Recovery means rebuilding trust with ourselves, a gradual process that requires much motivation and support.

 

As we learn and practice careful self-honesty, self-care, and self-expression, we gain authenticity, perspective, peace and empowerment.

 

By concentrating on healing ourselves emotionally, spiritually and physically, we are acknowledging that we are important, lovable and that the work to heal the family system needs to start with us, the individual.

As we learn new coping mechanisms, new ways to communicate and other life skills, we start to transform our lives.

By learning to focus on ourselves, our attitudes and well-being improve.

We learn that detachment is neither kind nor unkind. It does not imply judgment or condemnation of the person or situation from which we are detaching. Separating ourselves from the adverse effects of another person’s ALIENATION can be a means of detaching: this does not necessarily require physical separation.

 

Detachment can help us look at our situations realistically and objectively.

Detachment allows us to let go of our obsession with another’s behavior and begin to lead happier and more manageable lives, lives with dignity and rights, lives guided by a Power greater than ourselves. We can still love the person without liking the behavior.

 



 
 
 

This is a big week for me. You know there's a ton of things all coming together right now all at the same time which #1.) I couldn't had orchestrated any of this to make this all happened like it is but it is. On top of trying to keep up with new different therapy and doctor appointments I am also trying to do 90 Parental Alienation Anonymous meetings in 90 days and me starting with my sponsorship pod on Wednesday. There is a lot of pieces in a very well known puzzle and I do feel overwhelmed with the amount of different appointments I am trying to juggle right now.

 
 
 

Writing about this is literally the hardest thing in my entire life. I am actually lost talking about this still. It's been been 4 years since I first discovered her words.. I want to give voice to my daughter's own words who expresses "how the crowed watches in silence." And I break down. A world tried to stop it for her. A world tried tried to help me stop it for her. She goes on to write

"I tried to reach out for help,

But my cries were ignored,

So I hid behind my magic,

And kept my sadness stored.

In the end, all fades away,

No trace of what we've been,

And in the silence we lay,

Mere relics of a world that's been"

And I break down again. I am still trying to figure out what I am supposed to do, what I should do, what I shouldn't do or do not not have a right to do. I know she wants desperately to be heard. It's not that I know it... it's that she says that! She has half a dozen+ of writings talking about everything she went through and is still going through but has no idea that it is actually parental alienation she is experiencing and talking about. Her own words are actually word for word are words stated by World-Known PA Expert Karen Woodall cited here on She HAS a Mother. She desperately DESERVES to be heard! As a silenced Mother to hear the pleading begging cries to be heard and not to be then silenced... it devestates me to my core as this tiny girl was silenced and manipulated so brutely almost her entire childhood. I can only say that I believe that I am doing the right thing by letting this little girl's voice of mine been heard. As far as I've known since 2012 studying the World-Known Parental Alienation Experts there has never been an Adult Child's WORDS heard LIKE THIS. These are her words. I still do not know if me with saying HER WORDS on my site is wrong and I am invading her privacy or if I am giving her a voice to her words. I just really do not know. I know I am still trying to talk to her about her poems and she knows that back from when she was was actually "reading" my texts but haven't for the last 6 months. I am sure I totally fucked up everything with her for saying too long that I am going to talk to her about these poems and I took too long. It just took me too long. I am convinced that is why she refuses to read my texts anymore. It devastates me but at the same time I couldn't have done it any earlier than I am ready to do it... I just should had never jumped the gun trying to rush it because I so badly wanted to be ready to talk about it all to her and that was my was biggest mistake. I am extremely saddened that I have these mistakes. I go back to PAA and read this programs words. It helps. It brings right back to Step One. I am powerless. I am so powerless.


Regardless, the missing story to this piece about my daughter's words are that she was taken at age age 6-1/2 a little after 2 weeks after starting First Grade. It is very important to say that I had a chance at the end of her First Grade when she pull out of her desk giving me her First Grade Journal she wanted me to have (important). In grade school there were many issues with her principal and this court order parenting consultant refusing to give me her school records until I found out the federal law. Went on to be refused school nurse records/notes and the school's technician verified her records weren't delivered to my parental portal. BUT in her senior of of high school's creative writing class I was delivered her start to end 12th grade year long class assignment and final writings of about a dozen poems that devastated me and never made me prouder of her as THIS IS WHAT I TAUGHT MY LITTLE TO NEVER, NEVER, NEVER STOP saying your truth to everybody and every way you can until you are heard! I said that to her before she was even 4 years old and she was so traumatized by this father that I only could only believe she had been molested by a stranger and after time she was able to say that it was her dad telling her that Mommy was having psychotic mental episodes.IT'S SO HORRIFIC. I STILL BREAK DOWN.


I will share her artist statement. Everything else will be under the advisement of my therapist and my own advisement.I really do not know what to do and am looking at my new therapist to walk me through this. There is more I have to to add but I am trying to take this one step at a time.


Artist Statement


As an artist, I value creativity and the freedom to express myself in whatever way I see fit. I find inspiration in the world around me, especially in the people and experiences that have shaped my life and my perspective. I value the power of poetry to connect people and to bring them together in a shared experience that is specific to every person. I believe that art has the power to inspire, and to transform the world around me.


As a poet, I feel my role is to capture the beauty, the horror, the exhaustion, and complexity of life in a way that will resonate with others. I seek to illuminate the human experience in all its light and shadow, to explore the depths of the human heart and soul.


And in doing so, I hope to inspire others to see the world in a new light, to feel more deeply, and to connect more fully with the world around them.

My process of creating these poems was to first jot down all of my thoughts that I had during the days. I then listened to music and wrote down things that resonated with me, ideas, concepts, and words that I associated with those songs. After that I just started messing around with some ideas, usually writing the premise of the poem first, then diving deeper. I tend to write the first thing that comes to my head and then slowly edit it from there.


The poems that I wrote all have different premises that I wanted to be able to coexist and share a space. I wanted to make a bunch of contrasting pieces that alternated between light feelings and tones to dark ones. I wanted to show the “ying-yang” of life— the good and the bad. I wanted the contrast to be uncomfortable and uneasy.

Many things influenced my work. For my darker works, I mostly draw from personal experiences and my perspective on the world. For the lighter poems I tried to look at the world in a perspective that I used to have. One of a child who only sees the good.


I wanted to have opposites attract for this manuscript. I definitely draw a lot of inspiration from nature and also the idea of childhood and fairy tales.


I am very proud of my work. I only hope people feel the emotion and depth in what I was trying to portray.  I hope that people will take away from my poems the complexity of life. I want people to see and to feel the exhaustion that comes from being able to see so many perspectives of the world.




 
 
 
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