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The Invisible Parent

By: anonymous, Andrew Keith Walker
Narrated by: Peter Walters
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Publisher's summary

What happens when the very same system designed to protect children fails?

That’s exactly what is happening right now in the UK family courts in cases of parental alienation, a form of post-divorce abuse.

Cafcass defines parental alienation as "when a child’s resistance or hostility towards one parent is not justified and is the result of psychological manipulation by the other parent", yet experts, therapists, and social workers are not trained to assess or deal with cases involving parental alienation. I spent years making my case to judges, experts, and lawyers, all of whom failed to agree on what was actually happening between my ex-wife, my kids, and myself. At the time, it seemed like I was constantly trying to prove a negative, to find a new direction to reach my kids, and while all were promising, all ended in expensive dead ends as my ex-wife pursued her agenda.

If I had to sum up the experience of trying to prove parental alienation in the courts, I would describe it as being trapped in the backseat of a car while it crashes in slow motion.

The system is not fit for purpose. The family courts are slow and busy, burdened by the backlog of cases. Once you do get a hearing, they are often set months away, and even then, traditional safeguarding assessments fail to detect parental alienation. The longer the child is away from a parent, the harder it is to stop the alienation, and the longer the issue remains unaddressed, the risk of the children suffering mental health and behavioral problems increases. Alienated parents also often display signs of post-traumatic stress: paranoia, anxiety, and in some cases, they are suicidal.

It is my hope that this book will not only draw attention to the potential injustice in cases of parental alienation and the need for meaningful reform to prevent further irreparable damage, but that it will help a parent going through a family separation spot signs before it’s too late.

©2022 The Invisible Parent (P)2022 The Invisible Parent
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Repetitive, whiney, and no hook

Do not waste your time. The narrator was hard to listen to and made the book even more whiney. The 1st chapter could have been reduced by 30 minutes as it was insanely repetitive and every other sentence included “parent alienation.” Yes, we know that is what your book is about. If you claim your book is about facts only in your court proceedings then produce those facts. Tell the entire story and not repeat the same 5 sentences in each chapter. Expound. Grasp the reader and don’t leave pertinent information out because, I don’t know why you left it out. This was a book ai kept wishing would change and could only make it through the 4th chapter and quit. I could not endure the performance and not taking any responsibility for some of the issues that arose. Yes, I have been alienated from my child, I understand yet this was not something that helped me or explained his situation in full.

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