In western family structures, parental estrangement is becoming a considered choice for young people confronting major differences in traditional value systems between their parents and themselves. Parental Estrangement is often discussed as a singular outcome rather than a process with multiple developmental and relational pathways. This talk introduces a clinically grounded framework - the Five Pathways to Parental Estrangement- to help mental health professionals identify how estrangement develops, why it persists, and how different pathways require different therapeutic responses. Participants will learn to distinguish between estrangement rooted in abuse and safety concerns and estrangement emerging from misattunement, triangulation, mental-health vulnerabilities, or ideological and therapeutic reinforcement. The talk emphasises assessment, formulation, and ethically sound intervention.
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this talk, participants will be able to:
- Identify five distinct pathways that commonly lead to parental estrangement.
- Differentiate between estrangement driven by safety concerns and estrangement shaped by relational, psychological, or systemic factors.
- Assess how developmental stage, attachment patterns, and third-party influences contribute to estrangement trajectories.
- Evaluate the role of therapists, partners, and western cultural narratives in escalating or maintaining cutoff.
- Apply pathway-specific clinical strategies that reduce polarization and increase the possibility of repair or containment.
An Introduction to Narcissism: The map is not the territory