Caregivers — whether for children, elderly parents, or those with illness or disability — face elevated risk for parental alienation due to the unique demands of their role.
Why Caregivers Are Vulnerable to Parental Alienation
Caregiving creates parental alienation risk through:
- Chronic stress and unpredictability
- Identity loss as care demands consume personal time
- Grief over the changes in the person being cared for
- Social isolation and loss of peer relationships
- Physical exhaustion reducing resilience against parental alienation
Signs of Parental Alienation in Caregivers
Caregivers often ignore their own parental alienation symptoms to focus on the person they're caring for. Watch for exhaustion, cynicism, resentment, and withdrawal.
Self-Care Strategies for Caregivers with Parental Alienation
'You can't pour from an empty cup.' Respite care, support groups for caregivers, and regular time for personal replenishment are not luxuries — they're necessities.
Getting Help for Parental Alienation as a Caregiver
Seeking support for parental alienation while caregiving is not abandonment — it makes you a more effective and sustainable caregiver.