NOTE: This article provides an instructive description of a
woman, embittered by her unsuccessful marriage, who uses financial security and
her power to systematically indoctrinate her small daughter with a philosophy
of misandry (with “horror tales of men in general”). A boy and girl are
subjected to what in 1953 was referred to as both “alienating” and “poisoning
the youngster’s mind. Such terms served to describe what today we call
“parental alienation” long before 1953, however. Such terms were employed to
describe this very phenomenon as far back as the nineteenth century. It is a
great irony that today it is common for young girls to be aggressively
indoctrinated, by a wide range of sources, with misandric collectivist
philosophy while at the same time influential special-interest political groups
falsely claim that parental alienation is merely a 1980s-era invention of
males, or “big brutes” (a term used below).
****
FULL TEXT: “I do wish, Miss Blake, that you would address a
few remarks to a relative of mine who was given custody of her two children at
the time of her divorce.
“She is receiving alimony that permits her to live comfortably, if not
luxuriously. At least, she doesn’t have to worry about getting a job. What
caused the divorce has its two sides, but I know the woman was spoiled and has
her faults.
~ Painful to Watch. ~
“So it is painful to watch what she is doing to her children
in their relationship with their dad. It is obvious to everyone that he is
crazy about his boy and girl.
“He tries to visit them on every possible occasion. But if
she keeps on telling them what a heel their dad is and relaying to the young
innocents what a horror he was to live with, she may succeed in alienating them
from him entirely. That isn’t all.
“The little girl has been saying things about men being big brutes,
etc., which never should be heard out of a child’s mouth. I call it poisoning
the youngster’s mind.”
***
It is a known fact that after divorce conflicts hinging on
this very visitation clause.
Experts say the mother with the children in her custody too
often causes great unhappiness to the youngsters.
If the mother has custody of the children and the husband is
going to see them in the home, it is up to that mother to make the situation as
painless as possible. The children should be granted the indulgence of being
permitted to continue loving their father. For this purpose there should be
co-operation between the adults.
If resentment toward the father weighs heavily, the kindest
thing the mother can do is to prepare them for his visit.
If the mother handles these visits sympathetic understanding
and still carries a torch for her man, it is the surest was known to win him
back.
It is a monstrous mother, indeed, who would corrupt a
girl-child with horror tales in general. After all, where marriage fails, the
mother has a share in the responsibility.
[Doris Blake, “Mother Poisons Minds of Her Tots,” Los
Angeles Times (Ca.), Jun. 28, 1953, part III, p. 10]
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More on Parental Alienation
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More on Parental Alienation
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