For years, the case of Tom Phillips has shocked and divided New Zealand. A father vanishes into the wilderness with his three children, evading one of the largest manhunts in recent history, living in secrecy while the world demands answers. To some, Phillips is a dangerous fugitive. To others, a desperate father protecting his children.
But behind the arguments, the politics, and the police chases, lies a deeper, more haunting truth: the children themselves.
Psychologists are now warning that whatever the circumstances, the experience of growing up on the run can leave lifelong scars — scars that may never fully heal.

The Invisible Wounds
When children live in hiding, experts say, they face a unique form of trauma. Unlike typical cases of neglect or abuse, these children often live with constant fear, instability, and secrecy.
“They’re not just surviving without school or social contact,” explains one child psychologist. “They’re learning to normalize fear. They’re taught that the world outside is dangerous, that authority can’t be trusted, and that survival depends on silence.”
Over time, this can lead to:
Anxiety and hypervigilance — always waiting for danger to appear.
Difficulty forming trust — struggling to believe in safety, even with loved ones.
Identity confusion — a sense of being “different” or cut off from the rest of society.
Attachment struggles — loving a parent deeply but also resenting them for the hardships endured.
“Please, Save Them”
One expert, after reviewing reports from the Phillips case, gave a chilling statement:
“Please, save them. These children are in danger, not just physically but psychologically. Every day they spend in hiding is a day that deepens the trauma they will carry into adulthood.”
This plea has struck a chord with the public. For years, attention has focused on Tom Phillips’ motives, the failures of authorities, and the spectacle of a family living like ghosts in the bush. But the children — their silent suffering, their unseen pain — are now at the center of the debate.
Life Without a Childhood
What does it mean to grow up without school, friends, or stability? Psychologists describe it as a stolen childhood.
Playdates, birthday parties, sports, and classrooms — all the building blocks of social and emotional development — are missing. Instead, these children may have lived with:
Harsh survival routines.
Isolation from peers.
A deep mistrust of outsiders.
Pressure to keep secrets even from those who might have helped.
“When you strip away childhood experiences,” one psychologist notes, “you create adults who may function in the world, but who carry a hollow sense of loss they can’t put into words.”
The Bond and the Burden
At the same time, experts acknowledge something complicated: children often develop intense loyalty to the parent they grew up with, even in difficult circumstances.
“These kids probably see Tom not just as their father, but as their protector, their teacher, their entire world,” says another specialist. “That bond can make it almost impossible for them to separate his love from the hardships they endured. It’s a bond of survival — but also a burden.”
This duality — love and resentment, safety and fear — is what makes their recovery so difficult if they are ever returned to normal life.
What the Future Holds
If and when the Phillips children are found, the challenge will not end with their rescue. In many ways, that’s when the hardest work begins.
They may need years of intensive therapy to rebuild trust in the world, learn how to navigate society, and process the conflicting emotions about their father and their past.
Some experts fear the scars may never fully fade. Others hold hope that with the right care, the children can rebuild their lives and reclaim the innocence they were denied.
A Cry for Action
The haunting words — “Please, save them” — echo louder with each passing day. The Phillips children are more than the pawns of a fugitive’s decisions or the symbols of a system’s failures. They are children who deserve safety, stability, and a chance at healing.
Whether hidden in the bush, shielded by allies, or trapped in a cycle of secrecy, one truth remains: every moment spent in hiding deepens the shadow over their future.
And unless something changes soon, the world may one day discover that the greatest tragedy of the Tom Phillips saga was not the fugitive father or the failures of justice — but the three young lives forever shaped by a stolen childhood.
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