Services
What this support looks like
PATH offers one-on-one advisory support for fathers navigating parental alienation and high-conflict custody situations.
This work is centered on clarity, stability, and deliberate decision-making. Sessions are calm, focused conversations designed to help you understand what’s happening in your situation, identify patterns that may be causing harm, and slow things down enough to respond intentionally rather than reactively.
We spend time orienting to your specific circumstances — what feels most unstable, where you’re feeling stuck or uncertain, and what pressures are influencing your decisions. The goal is not to “fix” everything at once, but to help you regain perspective and move forward in a way that protects both your well-being and your relationship with your children.
This support is especially valuable when things feel confusing, contradictory, or overwhelming — and when the usual advice doesn’t seem to fit the reality you’re facing.

What this support is not
This work is not therapy, legal representation, or crisis intervention.
It’s not designed to diagnose, treat, or resolve every aspect of a custody or family court case. I don’t provide legal advice, make promises about outcomes, or advocate for confrontation, escalation, or leverage-based strategies.
PATH exists to help fathers slow the process down, regain clarity, and avoid decisions that unintentionally cause further harm — especially in situations where emotions are high and the dynamics are deeply counterintuitive.
This support is for fathers who
Are feeling disoriented, overwhelmed, or unsure how to respond in a high-conflict situation
Want to slow things down and make deliberate, thoughtful decisions
Are concerned about protecting their relationship with their children over the long term
Are open to perspectives that may challenge instinctive or familiar responses
This support is not for
Are seeking validation, revenge, or leverage over the other parent
Want aggressive tactics, confrontation, or guaranteed outcomes
Are looking for legal representation, therapy, or crisis services
Are not willing to pause, reflect, or take responsibility for their own decisions
