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Keeping Kids Out of the Middle: Child-Centered Parenting in the Midst of Conflict, Separation, and Divorce [Paperback]

Benjamin Garber (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 2, 2008

Are your kids growing up in a war zone?
Here's Your Peace Treaty

When co-parents conflict, their kids get caught in the middle. They become 'adultified,' infantilized, and alienated. They're made into messengers and spies, implicitly forced to grow up too fast or to remain needy for much too long. The antidote: practicing child-centered parenting--consistently creating parenting plans and conflict resolution strategies that genuinely meet children's emotional and psychological needs--first and foremost and for the rest of their lives.

Keeping Kids out of the Middle is not about divorce, and it's not about you. It is about your kids. This eye-opening and highly pragmatic book is a here-and-now guide toward better understanding and meeting the needs of your children. You will learn what child-centered parenting is, how to implement it productively, and how to communicate effectively with your parenting partners, no matter the legal status of your relationship, the distance between your homes, or the quality of your intimate relationship.

In Keeping Kids out of the Middle, child psychologist and state certified Guardian ad litem Benjamin Garber offers parents a radically new perspective on co-parenting in the midst of relationship conflict and teaches co-parents how to build a consistent, healthy environment for their children through the art of 'scripting,' establish better means of communicating and communication styles, and create parenting plans that help keep children protected. Thisis your guide to putting your children's needs first and giving them the safety net they must have in order to become healthy adults who are able themselves, to some day, keep their own kids out of the middle.


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Keeping Kids Out of the Middle: Child-Centered Parenting in the Midst of Conflict, Separation, and Divorce + Divorce Poison New and Updated Edition: How to Protect Your Family from Bad-mouthing and Brainwashing + The Co-Parenting Survival Guide: Letting Go of Conflict After a Difficult Divorce
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Benjamin D. Garber, Ph.D., is a New Hampshire licensed child psychologist, a state certified Guardian ad litem, and a practicing Parenting Coordinator. Dr. Garber has a Bachelor of Arts degree in developmental psychology and psycholinguistics from the University of Michigan, a Master of Science, and a Doctorate in child clinical and developmental psychology from Pennsylvania State University. Visit www.healthyparent.com to learn more about Dr. Garber and learn more about how to keep kids out of the middle.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter 5


The Essentials of
Co-Parenting

If our job as co-parents is to create an emotional safety net beneath our kids, these are the conceptual threads—the warp and weft—with which we weave:

1. -Health and safety are always our first priority. As often as we are forced to choose between that which makes our kids happy and that which makes our kids healthy, we always choose health first. Choices that compromise our children's health to make them happy are self-serving and short-lived. Choices that help our children become healthy allow them to discover their own happiness.
2. -Our love for our children is forever and no matter what. We know that our kids will test our limits, defy our rules, damage our possessions, and maybe even lash out in rage. Their specific behaviors may not be acceptable, but our love for our children is unbreakable. This is especially important when parents separate. While it appears that love can stop, your love for your child will not.
3. -We always promote our children's relationship with our co-parents. We do this by speaking to and about one another with respect. We never allow our adult feelings for one another (or any other adult's words or actions) to hinder the quality of our kids' relationships with each of us.
4. -We know that every person needs to feel loved and accepted. As adults, we do everything we can to make sure that our emotional needs are met by other adults. As parents, we expect and accept that we will provide love and acceptance for our children without any expectation in return.
5. -We know that our own health and calm, firm presence reassure our children. We take every reasonable step to remain physically and emotionally healthy and to learn to be the best caregivers we can. In doing so, we are not only giving our kids a solid foundation upon which they can grow, but we are also giving them permission through our example to take good care of ­themselves.


Living Together in Conflict

The goal is not to live without conflict.

Conflict is an expectable part of any caring relationship. The anger, fear, and sadness that fuel conflict are as necessary and natural as the happiness, hopes, and dreams that create the unique fabric of each ­relationship.

Because conflict happens, the goal is to manage it in healthy ways so that it becomes an opportunity for growth rather than a weapon of destruction. It's far easier to reach this goal when the relationship affects no one but you and your intimate adult partner. Once a child enters the equation, managing conflict in healthy ways can become at least as difficult as it is important.

What we know with certainty is that our kids are the barometers of our adult relationships. When we feel content, loved, and accepted, the emotional pressure in our lives diminishes, and our kids feel safe, confident, and secure. When conflict erupts in our adult relationships, the emotional pressure increases, and our kids feel anxious and fearful. Their behavior becomes less mature (a process known as regression), their emotions become erratic, and, over time, their sense of themselves and their ability to develop their own healthy relationships can be damaged.

'My daughter's too young to understand.'
'My son has learning and attention difficulties. When we argue, it goes right over his head.'
'My teenager is off in his own little world. He doesn't know.'

These are among the excuses that conflicted co-parents commonly make in the interest of comforting themselves. Unfortunately, all three are wrong. We know, for example, that newborn infants respond differently to the emotional tone of the voices that surround them and to the different physical experiences of being held by a calm parent or by an angry parent. Long before words are understood, the visual, audible, and tactile experiences of emotional pressure can cause a child to become tense herself, to cry and refuse food, or become unable to hold it down. When the pressure persists, physical development can be impacted and emotional development thrown off course. The child can become overly clingy or begin to reject caregiving altogether. In the long term, exposure to continuous emotional pressure can cause an infant or a toddler to shut down in something known as conservation-withdrawal.

We know as well that kids who struggle with math and English and science in school, those who are diagnosed with attention problems or with learning differences (including nonverbal learning disabilities), and even those on the autistic spectrum (Asperger's syndrome, for example) read and respond to their caregiver's emotions as much as their age mates, even if they are less able to put their experience into words.

And your teenager with his face buried in a video screen and his ears submersed in rap 'n' roll? Yep, he's listening, too. In fact, you have to wonder how much of some kids' escape into digital media, sports, drugs and alcohol, peer groups, and gangs are a response to the tension they live with at home.
The simple fact is that you cannot hide your feelings from your kids. They get it. They feel the conflict in your intimate adult relationship even if they don't see or hear it, and it affects them. Whether their experience of your adult conflict teaches them healthy strategies for coping with their own inevitable conflicts or leaves them scared, needy, angry, and confused depends on many factors, not the least of which is your success in keeping them out of the middle.


All in the Family

Kids become drawn into their parents' conflicts in a million subtle ways. The dramatic examples are easy to identify: the divorced mom who asks her son to collect the support check from his dad, the bitter partners who try to recruit their daughter into their hatred for each other, or the depressed dad who enlists his son to care for the younger kids—even the well-intentioned divorced couple who give their children the freedom to come and go at will between their two neighboring homes.

The most common ways that co-parents draw their kids into the middle are no less harmful, but they are much harder to see. These are the subtle, quiet, and usually well-intentioned ways in which that safety net woven between two caregivers is slowly torn to shreds. They can be classified into five types.
When was the last time you made one of these mistakes?

1. -Arguing about consequences in front of the kids. Perhaps the most common trap that co-parents fall into sounds like this:
-   'Billy,' one caregiver says, 'that behavior is unacceptable! You're grounded for a month!'
-   'Just a minute,' the other caregiver replies, right there in front of the child. 'That's way too harsh. I think he should only be grounded for a week!'
-   Suddenly, the conflict has shifted from the child and one parent to the two co-parents, leaving Billy on the sidelines, stirred up with feelings about the unacceptable behavior, and now amplified by the fact that he's caused (yet another) fight between his parents. This is a recipe for disaster.
-   'I already gave him a consequence!'
-   'And I'm changing it! I'm his father, and I'm in charge. Billy, it's only a week!
-   Father, in this instance, may have changed Billy's punishment, but much more significantly, he undermined Mother's authority. What will happen next time Mom tries to punish Billy? Right: Billy will run to Dad. Mom has lost respect and control. A subtle alliance between Billy and Dad has been built against Mom.
-   In a healthier interaction, Mom would have enforced an existing consequence. Last time Billy did something similar, an expectation had been set: 'If it happens again, then . . .' This not only makes the world predictable for Billy, but makes it much more likely that the parent-on-duty will be supported by the other parent later.
-   Even without the benefit of this prior structure to fall back on, Dad could have questioned Mom later, away from Billy. If that discussion helps Mom to change her mind, she has time to go back to Billy to correct herself: 'I think I was too harsh, Billy. Here's what we're going to do . . .'
-   Or there is another choice. As long as everyone is safe, the POD (Mom, in this instance) could simply have said, 'You're grounded until your father and I can talk it through. We'll let you know what the long-term consequence will be.'
-   But if Dad felt compelled to take a stand there and then in front of Billy, at least he could have done so in a respectful way:
-   'Hold on a second, Martha. Do you think that might be a little too much?'
-   'Hmmm . . . I hear you, George. Maybe I am overreacting a bit. What do you think would work better?'         
-   This process has the benefit of modeling healthy compromise and negotiation, even though it still risks casting one parent as the good guy and the other as the bad guy in front of the child. The result, formulated on the spot by mutually respectful, child-centered co-parents, sounds like, 'Okay, Billy. Your dad and I agree. You're grounded for ten days.'
2. -Undoing your co-parent's consequences. Consistency calls for co-parents to communicate in the interest of enforcing similar limits and consequences between homes when the co-parents live apart. Stability and predictability call for follow-through over time. When communication fails and consistency is poor, co-parents can become pitted against one another in the good-guy and bad-guy roles, a schism that leaves their child stuck in the middle.
-   Let's c...


Product Details

  • Paperback: 292 pages
  • Publisher: HCI (September 2, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0757307116
  • ISBN-13: 978-0757307119
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #52,197 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wisdom for Families of Divorce, November 28, 2008
This review is from: Keeping Kids Out of the Middle: Child-Centered Parenting in the Midst of Conflict, Separation, and Divorce (Paperback)
NHPA's Ben Garber has recently published his new book, Keeping Kids Out of the Middle: Child-Centered Paernting in the Midst of Conflict, Separation, and Divorce ($14.95 - Health Communications, Inc.), and I feel grateful for the opportunity to provide a review of this valuable work.

Dr. Garber's book tackles a subject of great relevence to modern families in conflict, those who offer treatment to these families, and the professionals in the legal community who adjudicate their disputes. As all who have provided treatment to children and families embroiled in divisive conflicts understand, this is complex and treacherous clinical territory to wade into. Children and adolescents caught in the crossfire of parental contests are at great risk for developing emotional, cognitive and behavioral problems. Treatment providers straddle precarious lines when they enter these waters - lines between mothers and fathers, between parents and children, between families, lawyers and courts. Keeping Kids Out of the Middle provides a competent road map for navigating this terrain.

The voice that Dr. Garber has used in his book is one that speaks clearly and directly to his audiences. It is free from confusing clinical jargon, but carries the weight of expertise and authority. Packed with down-to-earth practical guidance for parents and professionals alike, Keeping Kids Out of the Middle covers an impressive range of subjects in less than 300 pages, making this a very accessible and helpful read.

Some of the topics translated into clear terms in this work include the conditions of adultification, parentification, infantilization, alienation, and the dynamics of splitting. These and other hazards that children of conflicted families face are presented in the context of a how-to manual for protecting children from the indelible harms of parental adversity. Conflict management, communication skills, parenting plans, united fronts, structure, consistency, boundaries, limits, transition plans, and the integration of new parent partners into the fold are all competently explained in detail.

In addition to providing practical guidance for protecting children in high conflict families, Dr. Garber infuses his message with a very nuanced moral intonation. While emphasizing that his perspective is free from from biases toward gender, sexual orientation and non-traditional family structures, he effectively conveys a firm ethic that all parents absolutely must place their children's needs ahead of their own. Conflicted parents reading this book are encouraged to feel guilty about succumbing to dysfunctional patterns, and there are no apologies required for this guilt trip. Pulling this off requires a deft talent for pushing the right buttons without pushing readers away, and I found this made the book's lessons more compelling.

Keeping Kids Out of the Middle deserves an accessible slot on every family therapist's bookshelf. I have already pulled it out to display to several families I've worked with and encouraged them to read it. It's appearance and contents are non-threatening, and full of practical wisdom.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars For divorcing parents, November 7, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Keeping Kids Out of the Middle: Child-Centered Parenting in the Midst of Conflict, Separation, and Divorce (Paperback)
I teach a class for divorced and divorcing parents on how to NOT drag their kids through the muck and mess of THEIR divorce.
Please read this if you're going through the same thing. It will ring true.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
split weeks, postseparation parenting plan, adultified child, conflicted caregivers, successful parenting plan, residential responsibility, intimate adult partner, unshaded blocks, receiving parent, chameleon child, sending parent, intimate adult relationship, more frequent transitions, transition resistance, keeping kids, future album, calm means, adult conflict, parenting partner, decision index
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Keeping Kids Out of the Middle, The Essentials of Co-Parenting, Overwhelmed Co-Parent Supposed, Keeping In Touch, Refuse Transition, The Myth of the Nuclear Family, Scripting the Change, The Child's Experience of Adult Conflict, Disneyland Dad, Alternating Days, United States, Big Brother, Differences Among Co-Parents Determined, Vacations Only
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