Co-parenting with a Toxic Ex: What to Do When Your Ex-Spouse Tries to Turn the Kids Against You
Co-parenting with a Toxic Ex: What to Do When Your Ex-Spouse Tries to Turn the Kids Against You book cover

Co-parenting with a Toxic Ex: What to Do When Your Ex-Spouse Tries to Turn the Kids Against You

Paperback – May 1, 2014

Price
$16.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
224
Publisher
New Harbinger Publications
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1608829583
Dimensions
6.25 x 0.75 x 9 inches
Weight
10.6 ounces

Description

“In recent years, the study of parental alienation has become an enormously complex topic addressed in hundreds of books, scholarly chapters, and papers in academic journals.xa0A parent who finds herself or himself alienated from a previously loving child may quickly feel overwhelmed by the vast amount of professional and amateur advice that is available.xa0Amy J. L. Baker and Paul R. Fine have found a way to help alienated parents quickly―by focusing on five specific strategies by which a former spouse may cause parental alienation.”― William Bernet, MD , professor emeritus at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN“This book provides the reader with much needed support as well as specific and helpful advice about how to parent a child who is involved in his parent’s conflict. Every child deserves to love and be loved by both parents, and this book will help targeted parents achieve that goal.”― Jason Patric , actor, targeted father, and founder of Stand Up for Gus “ Co-parenting with a Toxic Ex is an excellent book for any parent dealing with a high-conflict co-parent in a separation or divorce. Baker and Fine accurately describe the hidden patterns of manipulation by a toxic ex that can lead to an alienated child―one who wants to avoid the other parent. Most important, they teach what to do and what not to do to protect a healthy parent-child relationship for the other parent regardless of these manipulations. This is a minefield and they provide supportive strategies and numerous tips for a reasonable parent to use―including how to avoid getting angry, giving up, or giving in.”― Bill Eddy , lawyer, therapist, and author of Don’txa0Alienate the Kids!: Raising Resilient Children While Avoiding High Conflict Divorce ( www.HighConflictInstitute.com )“While Co-parenting with a Toxic Ex is technically not classified as a workbook, divorce is work, and often becomes a full time job.xa0Amy J. L. Baker and Paul R. Fine have developed a chapter-by-chapter playbook for parents in any stage of divorce. The book encouragesxa0parents to bring strong parenting skills to the table while trying to create a solid foundation for the identity,xa0growth, and maturity of their children. This dynamic duo does it again for so many parents struggling to find their way through the maze of co-parenting after divorce.xa0Bravo!”― Jill Egizii , president of the Parental Alienation Awareness Organization, USA"Parenting expert Baker ( Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome ) and psychotherapist Fine have created a workbook specifically for divorced co-parents who sense they are losing the battle for their children’s love, loyalty, and respect. The book features tools, strategies, written exercises, and dialogues designed to help reduce the ex’s negative influence and 'delay, if not prevent' a child from choosing one parent over another. This guide helps co-parents recognize and understand the signs and symptoms of loyalty struggles and their insidious effects, while offering remedies based in positive and mindful parenting to help fashion a safe and loving environment. The authors suggest the familiar protocol of positive parenting as a way to strengthen the parent-child bond, and, when coupled with mindfulness techniques for personal awareness, this protocol can help unhappy, stressed parents handle the animosity and negative influence of their ex. Like a guerilla manual, the book arms co-parents with tools for coping with a variety of scenarios, including when the ex is sending poisonous messages, interfering with contact and communication, 'erasing and replacing,' encouraging the child to betray confidences and trust, or undermining the co-parent’s authority. Genuinely helpful, this guide tackles a sensitive problem and shows how to diffuse it with accepted and proven psychotherapeutic practices."― Publishers Weekly Amy J. L. Baker, PhD , is a national expert on children caught in loyalty conflicts and has written a seminal book on the topic, Adult Children of Parental Alienation Syndrome , published by W.W. Norton and Company. In addition to conducting trainings around the country for parents as well as legal and mental health professionals, Baker has written dozens of scholarly articles on topics related to parent-child relationships and has appeared on national TV, including Good Morning America, CNN, and the Joy Behar Show . She has been quoted in the New York Times and US News and World Report , among other print media outlets. Baker graduated from Barnard College, summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. She has a PhD in human development from Teachers College, Columbia University. More information is available on her website at www.amyjlbaker.com . Paul R. Fine, LCSW , is a licensed clinical social worker and psychotherapist in practice at a community mental health center in northern New Jersey. He has over twenty-five years’ experience working with diverse populations. His practice includes an eclectic and humanistic approach to problems faced by individuals and families.

Features & Highlights

  • Protect your child from alienation and loyalty conflicts.
  • During and after a difficult divorce, it’s easy for your relationship with your kids to become strained—especially if you are dealing with a toxic ex who bad-mouths you in front of your children, accuses you of being a bad parent, and even attempts to “replace” you with a new partner in your children’s lives. Your children may become confused, conflicted, angry, anxious, or depressed—and you may feel powerless. But there is help.   In this guide, you’ll discover a positive parenting approach to dealing with a hostile ex-spouse. You'll learn the best ways to protect your children from painful loyalty conflicts, how to avoid parental alienation syndrome, and techniques for talking to your children in a way that fosters honesty and trust. Co-parenting with a toxic ex can be challenging, but with the right tools you can protect your kids and make your relationship with them stronger than ever.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(554)
★★★★
25%
(231)
★★★
15%
(139)
★★
7%
(65)
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(-65)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Avoid this outdated book - The suggestions only apply to an extremely low conflict situation

Old and outdated ideas. I ran the suggestions by a marriage counselor and by a therapist that works with CPS kids and both said that the advice generally is not helpful. I am a family lawyer and represent children and found this to include some very dangerous suggestions. Simply being the better person means no one is able to negate the nasty things your ex is saying about you to your children. Silence is acquiescence. As this is such a complicated issue, you’re better off speaking to a real life therapist. Save your money for that.
93 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent book

This book opened my eyes to methods the ex was using to undermine my relationship with our kid. I recognized some but not all tactics, reading it really helped fill in the gaps between what I knew was inappropriate to what I suspected was inappropriate behavior on her part.

The book also does a good job explaining why these behaviors are detrimental to the child. If you're in litigation, it's vital to be able to explain to others why it's problematic.

A job well done by both authors.

I should note that there are typos in the book.
18 people found this helpful
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Highly recommend it. I just wish there was more of ...

This book is spot on with everything we are going through. Highly recommend it. I just wish there was more of a section on when to expect the kids to start realizing the truth about the toxic ex...if ever. A small chapter on child emotional development would have been great.
17 people found this helpful
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Good book with specific strategies

Gave it to my boyfriend. He really likes it a lot and is feeling more able to deal with his ex now. It gives a lot of specific strategy suggestions which is very useful. I'm glad I picked this one for him.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent book, excellent content

Very practical, realistic content and relatable advice to the problem of parental alienation. I finally felt like someone else understands because it is a lonely situation to be in.
6 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

highly recommend from someone splitting or dealing with a narcissist or angry ex
6 people found this helpful
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Great explanations for a difficult situation

Excellent strategies for what to do when there is a toxic parent. (For me, it came too late because my children are irreversibly alienated. But that is not the fault of the book.)

I would welcome a sequel about guiding the children to identifying the toxic behavior of the offending parent; that topic was unfortunately absent. But the book itself, as it is, is outstanding.
5 people found this helpful
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Author Amy Baker, PhD, a world-renowned expert on Toxic parenting! Save your kids, buy this book!

In addition to this great book, see 2020 release of "Raising Resiliant Children with a Borderline or Narcisstic Parent" by Margalis Fjelstad PhD, LMFT and Jean McBride MS, LMFT

I, and many other parents and their children owe much gratitude to author Amy J L Baker for the thousands of hours she has spent collaborating with researchers around the US and the world to write peer-reviewed journal articles. Parents like us then benefit when she translates that research-based insights into very useful books such as this one. You can't go wrong with any of Amy's book - they are all on the topic of parental alienation and each book covers a different, and necessary aspect of this horrible and challenging phenomenon which is considering both domestic violence on you the targeted parent, and emotional and psychological abuse on children.

Once you've read this book by Amy, another high quality and useful book I found valuable that was written by a mom named Renee Swanson is, "Parenting with a Toxic Partner: Helping Our Kids Survive and Thrive Amidst Emotional Abuse" Copywrite 2019 This book focuses a lot on how to protect your children's mental health.

It's great that you are reading this, it's a sign that you are a good parent. Invest much time to learning about this very counter-intuitive, horrific issue that has such low awareness in the courts, schools, and society. The time you spend now with pay big dividends in the future!
4 people found this helpful
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I'm grateful for this book.

I needed this. I've been living in hell for the last 5 years, trying to coparent with a narcissistic, gaslighting human being. This book gave me great perspective through a very difficult circumstance!
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Great, realistic approach and specific strategies for co-parenting with a toxic ex!
2 people found this helpful