Unapologetic Parenting
How to Handle Harassment From a High-Conflict Co-Parent — Practically and Legally
Excessive texts at midnight. Threatening voicemails. Showing up uninvited. Contacting your employer, friends, or family. The high-conflict co-parent’s harassment campaign is designed to exhaust and destabilize you. This guide explains how to respond — and how to turn their harassment into legal leverage.
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What Counts as Harassment in the Co-Parenting Context
Harassment from a high-conflict co-parent takes many forms — some obvious, some subtle. Recognizing it is the first step to responding to it effectively:
| Type | Examples |
|---|---|
| Communication harassment | Excessive texts or calls outside business hours; threatening or abusive messages; messages demanding immediate responses to non-urgent matters; dozens of messages per day |
| Physical harassment | Showing up at your home, workplace, or the children’s school uninvited; surveillance; following you; showing up at exchanges early or late to create conflict |
| Third-party harassment | Contacting your employer, family members, friends, or new partner; spreading false information; attempting to damage your professional reputation |
| Legal harassment | Filing repeated motions for matters that could be resolved through normal communication; emergency filings that are not emergencies; using the legal system to drain your resources |
| Financial harassment | Withholding child support to create pressure; making demands for financial documentation outside the discovery process; using financial control as leverage |
| Digital harassment | Monitoring your social media; creating fake profiles; sending hostile messages through alternative channels when blocked on the primary one |
Why They Do It — Understanding the Goal
Understanding what the harassment is designed to accomplish changes how you respond to it:
- Destabilization — constant low-grade stress impairs your functioning, judgment, and emotional regulation; this serves the high-conflict co-parent’s interests in every arena
- Provocation — they want your emotional reaction; angry responses, retaliatory messages, or escalations give them material to use against you in court
- Control — making you constantly respond to them maintains the dynamic of control they depended on during the relationship
- Exhaustion — litigation is expensive and emotionally draining; the goal is often to exhaust your resources until you agree to terms favorable to them
- Attention — for many narcissistic personalities, any response — even a hostile one — is preferable to being ignored
What They Are Not Expecting
They are not expecting you to document everything methodically, respond minimally and only to child-related matters, and build a legal case from their own behavior. The harassment campaign that feels like an attack is, if you respond correctly, also evidence.
Your Immediate Response Strategy
- Do not respond in kind — not with anger, not with threats, not with matching volume; any emotional response confirms that the harassment is working and rewards it
- Screenshot and save everything before responding or blocking — the evidence value of harassment depends entirely on having it preserved
- Respond only to child-related substance, once, through the designated channel — BIFF: Brief, Informative, Friendly tone, Firm; do not address the harassment in your response
- Do not respond to harassment sent outside the designated channel — if they text when you communicate through OurFamilyWizard, do not respond to the text
- Turn off notifications for the communication channel — check it at set times rather than responding in real time to every message
Legal Tools to Stop the Harassment
| Tool | What It Does | When to Use It |
|---|---|---|
| Motion to enforce communication provisions | If your court order limits communication and they are violating it, you can seek enforcement and sanctions | When the harassment violates specific court order provisions |
| Motion to modify communication provisions | Asks the court to add or strengthen communication restrictions — such as requiring a co-parenting app | When the current order does not adequately restrict communication |
| Protective order | Court order prohibiting specific contact; can include family violence, stalking, or harassment findings | When the harassment constitutes family violence, stalking, or harassment under Texas law |
| Cease and desist letter | Formal notice from your attorney that the conduct is documented and legal action will follow | For harassment that does not yet meet the legal threshold for a protective order but is significant and documented |
| Criminal complaint | Filing a police report for stalking or harassment under Texas Penal Code | When the conduct meets the criminal threshold — repeated, threatening, causing fear |
When to Seek a Protective Order
A protective order under the Texas Family Code or the Texas Penal Code may be available when the harassment constitutes family violence, stalking, or criminal harassment. The threshold requires:
- Family violence protective order — a history of family violence or an immediate threat; does not require physical assault — coercive control, threats, and emotional abuse can qualify
- Stalking protective order — two or more incidents of conduct that would cause a reasonable person to feel fear; applies to surveillance, following, showing up at locations
- Criminal harassment (Tex. Penal Code §42.07) — repeated communications designed to harass, annoy, alarm, or embarrass; threatening communications; false reports
A protective order in a custody case has significant legal implications — it affects the possession order, custody arrangements, and the high-conflict co-parent’s legal standing. If you believe the threshold is met, consult your attorney about whether to pursue one. Read the complete guide to protective orders in Texas →
Carl Knickerbocker Law — Round Rock, TX
Their harassment campaign is evidence. Let’s build the case from it.
Carl Knickerbocker Law handles high-conflict custody cases and harassment situations throughout Round Rock, Georgetown, and Williamson County. Free consultation.
Schedule a Free Consultation (512) 763-9282