Bryan’s topics include: Overcoming Adversity We all have experienced difficulties in our lives. The rollercoaster of life, at times, can be overwhelming. Each end everyone one of us has the capability to create, experience and share hope and joy. Bryan shares his experiences of his lifelong search for his mother, brain injury, difficult relationships, losing his daughter to show overcoming the difficult times and experiencing life at it's fullest is possible after tragedy.
Parental Abduction/Alienation When a parent abducts their own child the taking parent must implement Parental Alienation in order to control the child. These tactics used on the child to create hate and fear of the targeted parent can have lifelong affects, known as Parental Alienation Syndrome, PAS. Bryan explains his father's destructive tactics he used for decades to control Bryan and how Parental Alienation still effects Bryan, forty years later. “My brain injury and recovery was the toughest two years of my life… but I would not trade the experience for a million dollars.”
Bryan, abducted at two years old by his father, Bryan searched for his mother for years, finally finding her three decades later. He painfully discovered his mother had searched for him for years then, giving up, she attempted suicide.
Bryan speaks about his family tragedy and rebirth at public presentations and in his book Have You Seen My Mother.
Today, Bryan is a world traveler, public speaker, author and professional actor.
Happiness is not found in the physical, but rather, the conscious and unconscious mind, one’s attitude, helping others and achievement of life goals.
Abducted at two years old by his father, Bryan searched for his mother for years, finally finding her three decades later.
He painfully discovered his mother had searched for him for years then, giving up, she attempted suicide.
Bryan speaks about his family tragedy and rebirth at public presentations and in his book Have You Seen My Mother.
Every year, in the United States, an estimated 350,000 children are abducted by a parent.
In the United States parentally abducted children make up the second largest group of missing kids next to runaways.
Parental Kidnap, a severe form of parental alienation, will not only devastate the parent victim, but will also leave the abducted child emotionally and psychologically scarred.
Children need both parents and thrive when they have the love of both parents and extended family. Unfortunately, in many divorces and separations, some parents find it difficult to see past their anger to the real needs of their children.
The goal of Prevent Parental Kidnap is to inform, from the child's point of view, the destructive outcomes and abuse from parental kidnap. Prevent Parental Kidnap, Inc. is a non-profit organization currently seeking 501c3 status.
We believe children need and have the right to both parents. Through education, from the child's point of view, we inform social services, therapy, medical and legal professionals of the abuse endured by a child when abducted by a parent and how to identify a child who has been turned against a parent.
In our workshops Bryan McGlothin tells his personal story of abduction at two years old and how he endured three decades of parental alienation at the hands of his father.
Bryan discusses the research of many professionals like Dr. Dorothy Huntington, Dr. Amy Baker and Dr. Ludwig Lowenstein and how their research relates to his own life of emotional abuse.
It is our mission to save our children through the education of those whom they rely on.