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The Silent Slide to Alienation: How One Refused Handover Escalates

Separations and divorces have wide-ranging consequences. One familiar scene keeps repeating: a child gets upset at handover, the resident parent says they can’t force them and contact stops. The immediate instinct to prevent discomfort and acknowledge the child’s feelings feels right — but when that instinct becomes the default, a child’s momentary distress can turn into lasting alienation.

Why we need to think beyond the moment Of course we must ask, “What is in the child’s best interest right now?” But this shouldn’t end the conversation. We also need to ask, “How will this choice affect the child’s relationship with both parents over time?” Acting only on short-term avoidance can protect a single moment while quietly eroding relationships that matter for years.

How a one-off upset turns into a pattern

Often the sequence is simple and fast:

  • A child resists at handover.
  • The resident parent refuses to make them go. 
  • Contact stops. 

That visible distress gets treated as decisive. What rarely gets examined is facilitation: 

Was an adult preparing the child? 

Was support offered through the transition?

 Too often, adult responsibility to support contact quietly diminishes, and the child’s distress functions as a deciding factor.

Why those “choices” aren’t really choices

Children in these families don’t decide in a vacuum. Their reactions are shaped by:

  • The emotional climate at home
  • Loyalty pressure or fear of betraying a parent 
  • Anxiety about the transition itself
  • System cues that effectively validate avoidance 

When adults and systems accept avoidance, children learn a powerful and problematic lesson: “If I resist or am distressed, I don’t have to go.” That lesson becomes self-reinforcing.

The real costs over time

When facilitation is ignored and avoidance becomes the norm, predictable harms follow: 

  • Contact dwindles 
  • Resistance to contact hardens
  • Simplified narratives take hold — one parent is cast as “bad”
  • Relationships with the non-resident parent weaken All of this often wears the mantle of “the child’s best interest,” but it effectively hands children an adult role: gatekeeper to whether a parent remains in their life.

Facilitate, don’t force  and don’t abdicate responsibility

This isn’t about compelling a child to spend time with someone they dislike. It’s about adults taking responsibility for the process so the child’s choice is informed, supported, and free from undue pressure. Good facilitation looks like: 

  • Preparing the child for what will happen
  • Communicating a clear expectation that contact will occur 
  • Supporting the child through distress rather than abandoning the expectation 
  • Not deferring entirely to the child when they’re anxious or pressured

A short call to action for professionals

If you work in family law, child welfare, mental health, or the courts, change the question you record. Stop simply noting “the child was distressed.” Start documenting: 

“What was done to support the child through that distress?” 

Record facilitation efforts, not just outcomes. When systems pair immediate safety with active facilitation and long-term relational thinking, children are far more likely to maintain meaningful relationships with both parents.

Protecting children from harm is non-negotiable. But protecting them and preserving their relationships aren’t opposing goals  they should be joined. Shift from crisis-only thinking to a practice that balances immediate safety with sustained facilitation, and we’ll see healthier, more durable outcomes for kids and families.

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