"I never thought that this would happen to me. When it happened, I thought I was the only one!" He cried another orphan grandmother. How can grandparents be so vulnerable to the normal part of their life cycle?
The deprived grandparents are part of a growing family of loving grandparents and undeniably deprive parents of the right to visit with their grandchildren. People ask: "What have you done? What do you have to do?" Actually, no! These grandparents are the goal of parental alienation, either through associations in the process of marriage disintegration or infiltration of family hatred. The days of "destroying their decay" are over, and sometimes this is all that is needed to lose access.
Refusal to visit not only causes grandparents to suffer, but they also suffer when they lose contact with their grandparents. GRANDPARENT rights include child rights. In fact, children should have the right to maintain a close relationship with their grandparents, no matter what happens to their parents.
Expanded family relationships are critical to all aspects of child development, so when faced with family disharmony, we need to work to eliminate problems, not people.
The story of grandparents portrays the tragic reality that children are seen as "property"; when I enter the unknown legislative and non-profit sectors, this has become a continuing struggle to create solutions and my journey of self-discovery. Most importantly, from the judicial system, the special and profound important links between grandparents and grandchildren have been protected and respected.
Everyone needs to get both a big man and a grand child to become a complete human. Margaret Mead
Orignal From: Advocating the protection of grandparents - grandson bonds
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