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đŸ§© Entanglement, Gatekeeping & Triangulation: When Estrangement Isn’t What It Seems

Written by Rita Palmer | Jul 1, 2025 1:00:00 PM

đŸŒ«ïž The Fog No One Prepares You For

Estrangement doesn’t always feel like a clean break.  It’s more like a fog — a slow erasure.  One day, you realize you’re being left out of conversations you used to be central to. The story of your relationship has changed, and you don’t recognize the version of you that’s being spoken about — or silenced.

If you’ve felt that disorientation — like the ground is shifting beneath you —you’re not alone.

And you're not broken.

What you're likely caught in are relational dynamics so complex, they rarely get named:

  • Entanglement
  • Gatekeeping
  • Triangulation

These patterns don’t always leave obvious scars.  But they do leave a trail of confusion, helplessness, and self-blame — especially for estranged parents who are desperate for clarity, starving for contact, and grieving in silence.

Let’s name what’s happening — so you can start choosing something different.

 

🐘 The Blind Men & the Elephant: A Sacred Reminder

There’s an ancient Indian parable worth remembering:

A group of blind men come across an elephant.  One touches the trunk and says, “It’s a snake.”  Another touches the leg: “No, it’s a tree.”  One grabs the ear: “It’s a fan.”  The last touches the tail: “You’re all wrong. It’s a rope.”

Each man touches a different part of the truth — but believes his version is the whole story.

And so
 they argue.  And none of them can see the bigger picture.

 

🔍 Why This Matters in Estrangement

You may be seen through just one part of your story — a wound, a misremembered moment, a narrative passed on by someone else.

That fragment becomes your identity in your child’s eyes
while your full truth — your gold — remains invisible.

Gatekeeping, triangulation, and entanglement are the hands feeling only the tail, the trunk, the leg — and making absolute meaning out of a partial experience.

It’s not just painful. It’s dehumanizing.  But naming the pattern helps you step out of it — without internalizing it.

 

🔗 Entanglement: When Identities Blur

Entanglement happens when emotional boundaries are so blurred that your child’s pain becomes your shame, and their silence becomes your identity.

You stop being seen as a whole person — and become a symbol.

  • A symbol of their unprocessed childhood.
  • A symbol of generational trauma.
  • A placeholder for something they haven’t yet sorted out — and maybe don’t know how to.

You may be carrying guilt that doesn’t belong to you. You may be reacting to pain that isn’t yours. You may be waiting for reconciliation as proof that you are lovable.

But healing doesn’t come from being chosen again. It comes from untangling your sense of self from the story they’re holding onto.

 

đŸšȘ Gatekeeping: When Someone Else Holds the Key

Gatekeeping is when access to your child or grandchildren is controlled by a third party — often a partner, spouse, therapist, or even a group.

This person becomes the “emotional gate,” filtering or denying contact.  It’s not always obvious. You might hear:

  • “They’re just not ready.”
  • “You need to respect their boundaries.”
  • “It’s best if you give them space.”

But underneath, there’s often:

  • Narrative rewriting
  • Power dynamics
  • Emotional leverage

 

🧭 What You Must Know:

You’re not crazy for feeling blocked.  You’re not dramatic for feeling erased.  You’re not broken for not knowing how to reach your child.

Gatekeeping is real, and it often says more about someone else’s fear than your failure.

đŸ”ș Triangulation: When You’re Talked About Instead of To

Triangulation is when a third person is brought in to mediate, manipulate, or manage the relationship between two people — usually to avoid direct vulnerability or conflict.

In estrangement, it sounds like:

  • “Your sister says you’re still not owning what you did.”
  • “My partner doesn’t feel comfortable with you being involved.”
  • “I heard you said something hurtful to grandma.”

It feels like being on trial — with no ability to speak in your own defense. You become a character in someone else’s story.

Triangulation strips you of agency. It replaces relationship with narrative control.

The antidote?  Don’t play the role. Don’t argue with the projection.  Step out of the triangle — with your dignity intact.

❓ What About the Pushback?

Here’s what some may say:

“Maybe your child is just protecting themselves.”
“Gatekeeping is just another word for setting boundaries.”
“Aren’t you making yourself the victim again?”

Fair questions. But here’s the deeper truth:

✅ Boundaries clarify — gatekeeping controls.
✅ Healing invites conversation — triangulation avoids it.
✅ Self-reflection is not the same as self-erasure.

This is not about making anyone the villain. It’s about seeing the system you’ve been trapped in — so you can stop making yourself the problem inside it.

 

🕯 The Call Back to Yourself

You may never get the full story.  You may never be told “what really happened.”  You may never be invited back in — not in the way your heart longs for.

But here’s what you can do:

You can stop believing you’re only the part they touched.  You can stop waiting to be chosen to remember that you’re worthy.  You can choose peace — not because they said you could have it,  but because it was yours all along.

This is the sacred, quiet work of self-remembrance.  Not to be seen again — but to see yourself, clearly, deeply, wholly.  To step out of the fog
 and come home to the truth of who you are.

 

🔄 Reclaiming the Story That’s Yours

You might never hear the full truth. You might never uncover what was said when you weren’t in the room. You may never receive the invitation back.

But your peace isn’t waiting on their words.

But your peace does not depend on their permission.

Your story doesn’t end in the fog of estrangement.  It begins in the moment you stop gripping the narrative that others handed you and start remembering the self that existed before it was rewritten.

So ask yourself gently:

What if I’m not broken
but becoming? What if this pain didn’t ruin me — it revealed the gold underneath?

You don’t need to defend, prove, or wait.

You don’t have to fix the system to stop playing your role inside it.

You get to step out of the triangle.  You get to lay down the guilt that was never yours.  You get to reclaim your name — from within.

This is what self-remembrance looks like.  It’s quiet. It’s fierce. And it belongs only to you.

🔔 If You’re Ready to Step Out of the Pattern

This isn’t about fixing them.  It’s about reclaiming you.

If you're ready to move out of the triangle, the gate, and the entanglement — not in anger, but in sovereignty —

📧 Email me directly: rita@parentchildreconnect.com

You don’t need permission to begin again.  You only need to remember.

If you’re ready to move from confusion to clarity, from fragmentation to wholeness, email me directly: rita@parentchildreconnect.com

This is sacred work.  You don’t have to do it alone.  But only you can begin it.

 

With reverence and fire,


Rita Palmer
Relationship Master Coach | Guide for Estranged Parents