Stimulus Control and Identifying Inauthentic Parent-Child Conflict
Stimulus Control and Identifying Inauthentic Parent-Child Conflict
Stimulus Control and Identifying Inauthentic Parent-Child Conflict
In authentic parent-child conflict, the child’s behavior is under the stimulus control of the
parent’s behavior. In authentic parent-child conflict, if we change the parent’s behavior
then we will see a corresponding change in the child’s behavior, because the child’s
behavior is under the stimulus control of the parent’s behavior.
In inauthentic parent-child conflict, on the other hand, the child’s behavior is not under the
stimulus control of the parent. This means that if we change the parent’s behavior the
child’s behavior remains unchanged. This would represent strong clinical evidence that the
parent-child conflict is not authentic.
There are two possible hypotheses for inauthentic parent-child conflict in which the child’s
behavior is not under the stimulus control of the parent’s behavior:
1. Inherent Child Vulnerability: The child may be the sole cause of the parent-child
conflict because of some inherent child vulnerability, such as autism, or ADHD, or
sensory-motor processing deficits, that is leading to the parent-child conflict.
In this type of situation, the treatment is to alter the parent’s behavior to become
more responsive to the child’s inherent vulnerabilities (for example we might work
with the parent to set up various reward and punishment contingencies based on
the child’s behavior). When we do this, we will then see a corresponding change in
the child’s behavior because we will have then achieved stimulus control over the
child’s behavior.
Similarly, if the child’s behavior is not under the stimulus control of the targeted parent
with whom the child is in conflict, then we can change the targeted parent’s behavior
forever without producing any change in the child’s behavior. The focus of treatment
needs to be on the correct locus of stimulus control for the child’s behavior. In order for
treatment to be successful, we need to correctly identify the location of stimulus control for
the child’s behavior and then change that stimulus to change the child’s behavior.
In a cross-generational coalition, the stimulus control for the child’s conflict with the
targeted parent is the tacit and covert support the parent-child conflict with the targeted
receives from the allied parent in the cross-generational coalition. So in order to resolve
the parent-child conflict with the targeted parent, therapy must alter the stimulus (the tacit
and covert support) the child is receiving from the allied targeted parent.
The typical treatment strategy is to expose the hidden cross-generational coalition of the
child with the allied parent and to have this (covert) coalition openly acknowledged as
being responsible for the child’s conflicts with the targeted parent. We then convince the
allied parent to release the child from the cross-generational coalition, thereby allowing the
child’s behavior to come back under the stimulus control of the targeted parent.
If the allied parent does not acknowledge the coalition or does not release the child from
the coalition, then treatment becomes highly intractable. Efforts to return the child to
normal-range behavior will be met with equal or greater countervailing psychological
pressure on the child from the allied parent seeking to keep the child in symptomatic
conflict with the targeted parent. Treatment efforts that do not involve the release of the
child from the cross-generational coalition will therefore turn the child into a
“psychological battleground” between the goals of therapy to restore healthy normal-range
development and the goals of the allied parent to keep the child symptomatic.
Turing the child into a “psychological battleground” between the goals of therapy and the
goals of the allied parent will be psychologically harmful for the child. Therapy should
therefore be ended under Standard 10.10 of the APA ethics code which requires
termination of therapy that is not likely to be effective or that will be harmful. Therapy can
be resumed once the proper protections are established to prevent the child from being
turned into a “psychological battleground.”
2
Inverted Hierarchy
In addition to the absence of stimulus control over the child’s behavior, one of the other
highly prominent symptom indicators of a cross-generational coalition is an “inverted
family hierarchy” in which the child is elevated and over-empowered in the family
hierarchy to a position of judging the parent.
In healthy family hierarchies, parents exercise executive leadership in the family and
children are expected to show age-appropriate cooperation with the executive leadership
of their parents. In healthy families, parents judge children’s behavior as appropriate or
inappropriate and parents deliver consequences to their children based on these parental
judgements. This is called parenting.
In an inverted family hierarchy, children are empowered within the family dynamics into a
position of judging the parent, and children in an inverted hierarchy punish their parents
for the children’s judgements of parental failures. The child’s over-empowerment to a
status above that of the parent is the product of the child drawing power and support from
the child’s coalition with the allied parent in the cross-generational coalition. An inverted
family hierarchy in which the child is empowered to judge the adequacy of a parent
represents a strong clinical indicator of a cross-generational coalition as being the
responsible cause of the parent-child conflict with the targeted parent.
Defiance of Court Orders: Child defiance of Court orders can also be a symptom
feature of the child’s over-empowerment in the family hierarchy (social hierarchy)
through a cross-generational coalition with one parent against the other parent, in
which the child feels entitled by the coalition with one parent to disregard the
authority of the Court regarding custody and visitation orders with the other parent.
In some cases, this over-empowerment in the family hierarchy may be the result of
parental abdication of authority (such as occurs with chronic juvenile delinquency;
DSM-5 Conduct Disorder). In these cases the child displays a variety of anti-social
behaviors such as theft, assault, and drug use. However, when the defiance of Court
orders occurs in a child who is otherwise well-behaved at school and cooperative
with the supposedly “favored” parent, then the child’s selective defiance of Court
orders is strongly indicative clinical evidence of a cross-generational coalition with
the supposedly “favored” parent who is providing tacit support for the otherwise
well-behaved child’s defiance of Court orders.
This use of the parent’s first name is a symptom indicator of the nullification of the
parent as a parent and reflects a psychological equivalency of the child to the parent
in the family hierarchy. The nullification of the parent as a parent is a product of the
child’s over-empowerment in the family hierarchy to a position above that of the
parent and is strongly suggestive clinical evidence of a cross-generational coalition
with the allied and supposedly “favored” parent that empowers the child into an
inverted family hierarchy with the other parent.
4
These phrases of selective parental incompetence by the allied parent (“It’s not me it’s the
child. What can I do? I can’t force the child.”) represent the selective abdication of parental
authority and parental obligations for providing appropriate parental guidance and
discipline to the child for child misbehavior, and these phrases betray the coalition that this
parent has with the child in which the allied parent is tacitly and covertly supportive of the
child’s conflicts with the other parent.
Children recognize this covert communication of tacit parental support and respond in
accord with the covert parental directive to be selectively defiant rather than to the overt
words of the allied parent that supposedly encourage the child to have a positive
relationship with the other parent. The display of selective parental incompetence by the
allied and supposedly favored parent (i.e., the covert communication of tacit parental
support for the child’s conflict with the other parent) is a highly characteristic symptom
indicator of a cross-generational coalition between the child and the supposedly “favored”
parent against the other parent.
Confluence of Diagnostic Evidence
Taken together, the absence of stimulus control which indicates an inauthentic parent-child
conflict, the evidence of an inverted family hierarchy and the child’s entitlement and over-
empowerment, and displays by the allied parent of selective parental incompetence
regarding the child’s conflicts with the other parent all represent a strong preponderance
of clinical evidence supporting the interpretation that the parent-child conflict with the
targeted parent is not authentic and is instead the product of a cross-generational
coalition of the child with the allied and supposedly “favored” parent against the other
parent, the targeted parent.
Treatment will then need to focus on disrupting and dismantling the cross-generational
coalition (a psychological “boundary violation”) in order to restore the child’s healthy and
normal-range development. Treatment for a child who is being triangulated into the
spousal conflict through a cross-generational coalition with one parent against the other
parent must first protect the child from being turned into a “psychological battleground”
between the goals of therapy to restore the child’s normal-range and healthy development
and the goals of the allied and supposedly “favored” parent to maintain the child’s
symptomatic conflict with the other parent.
Traditional therapy is to expose the hidden and covert cross-generational coalition and
have the allied parent release the child from the coalition. Therapy can then proceed to
restore the child’s normal and healthy development. If the allied parent does not choose to
recognize the coalition and does not choose to release the child from the cross-generational
coalition (because of the advantages this coalition provides to the allied parent), then
therapy may need to be terminated under Standard 10.10 of the APA ethics code because
therapy will likely be ineffective and may be harmful to the child by turning the child into a
“psychological battleground” between the goals of therapy to restore the child’s normal-
range and healthy functioning and the goals of the allied parent to maintain the child’s
continuing symptomatic conflict with the other parent. Under these circumstances, once a
protective separation of the child from the negative parental influence of the allied parent
can be achieved, therapy to restore the child’s healthy development can be resumed.
5
The Child’s Expressed Wishes
From the perspective of clinical psychology and healthy child development, under no
circumstances should the child’s expressed wishes be given weight when there is
significant inter-spousal conflict. Providing the child’s expressed wishes with weight when
there is significant inter-spousal conflict would effectively make the child’s expressed
wishes a “prize to be won” in the spousal conflict, thereby acting to further triangulate the
child into the spousal conflict and would reward the parent who is able to form a
pathological cross-generational coalition with the child.
The goal of therapy is to de-triangulate the child and dismantle cross-generational
coalitions. Providing the child’s expressed wishes with weight would be exactly the wrong
thing to do from a treatment and healthy child development perspective. One of the
pathological indicators of a cross-generational coalition is an unhealthy inverted family
hierarchy in which the child becomes over-empowered by the coalition with one parent to
judge the adequacy of the other parent. Treatment is to reestablish a healthy family
hierarchy in which parents provide executive leadership and children are expected to
cooperate with the executive leadership of their parents. Providing weight to the child’s
expressed wishes when there is significant inter-spousal conflict only supports the
inappropriate elevation of the child in the family hierarchy above the parent by placing the
child in a position of judging his or her parents, selecting a favored and rejected parent
based on the judged adequacy of the parent. This is directly contra-indicated and highly
destructive from a treatment perspective.
If there is a desire to provide the child’s expressed wishes with weight, the inter-spousal
conflict should first be resolved so that the child’s expressed wishes do not become a “prize
to be won” in the spousal conflict. Only in the context of low to no inter-spousal conflict
should a child’s expressed wishes be given weight in family decision making.
Craig Childress, Psy.D.
Clinical Psychologist, PSY 18857