No, Smiles.
It goes both ways. From GPs or from ACs.
In this case, I’m saying that a GP (or AC) that assumes the mother (or GP) is dishonest because the GP (mom) doesn’t know all the facts is manipulating based on wrong or bad assumptions. It goes both ways for parents or GPs.
Bad and wrong assumptions based on partial information.
The GPs that accuse the mother of ‘being dishonest’ without having access to all of the reasons they didn’t come for dinner, reasons that could have caused the mother to:
1: not go to the GPs
And/or
2: not keep the original plan to go out with friends
are manipulating and creating false, unfounded and ill informed bias that ‘Mom is dishonest’. This could be reversed for an AC that invited GPS for dinner that didn’t show also.
Mom could have been very honest, but the child and the GPS may not have access to that information that moms honest decision was based on. It doesn’t mean that Mom was lying, or that she’s dishonest. But most of us are predispositioned to assume the worst about folks, which creates opposing truths.
Guiding, creating bias or manipulating the event to a pre-determined ‘Mom is dishonest’ theme without having all the facts, is ... manipulation.
Specifically, manipulation to a false narrative. GPs and parents are both flawed in their accusations when make assumptions without having all the facts. Opposing truths are the foundation for most of all estrangement cases, and this is one method that opposing truths are created on each side.
I’m almost sure you are aware of this.
Or maybe we just agree to disagree in principle.