SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  34
Murray Bowen is one of the most respected family theorists in
the field of family therapy. Bowen views the family unit as
complex and believes it is important to understand the
interactions among the members in order to solve problems.
Satir and Minuchin also advanced family therapy with their
concepts and models. As a clinical social worker, using these
models (along with having an ecological perspective) can be
very effective in helping clients.
For this Discussion, review the “Petrakis Family” case history
and video session.
By Day 4
Post
(using two concepts of Bowen’s family theory) a discussion
and analysis of the events that occurred after Alec moved in
with his grandmother up until Helen went to the hospital. If you
used the concepts of structural family therapy, how would your
analysis of the situation be different? Which family theory did
you find to be most helpful in your analysis? Finally, indicate
whether Satir’s or Minuchin’s model is the more strength-based
model. Why?
The Petrakis Family Helen Petrakis is a 52-year-old
heterosexual married female of Greek descent who says that she
feels overwhelmed and “blue.” She came to our agency at the
suggestion of a close friend who thought Helen would benefit
from having a person who could listen. Although she is
uncomfortable talking about her life with a stranger, Helen said
that she decided to come for therapy because she worries about
burdening friends with her troubles. Helen and I have met four
times, twice per month, for individual therapy in 50-minute
sessions. Helen consistently appears well-groomed. She speaks
clearly and in moderate tones and seems to have linear thought
progression; her memory seems intact. She claims no history of
drug or alcohol abuse, and she does not identify a history of
trauma. Helen says that other than chronic back pain from an
old injury, which she manages with acetaminophen as needed,
she is in good health. Helen has worked full time at a hospital
in the billing department since graduating from high school. Her
husband, John (60), works full time managing a grocery store
and earns the larger portion of the family income. She and John
live with their three adult children in a 4-bedroom house. Helen
voices a great deal of pride in the children. Alec, 27, is
currently unemployed, which Helen attributes to the poor
economy. Dmitra, 23, whom Helen describes as smart,
beautiful, and hardworking, works as a sales consultant for a
local department store. Athina, 18, is an honors student at a
local college and earns spending money as a hostess in a family
friend’s restaurant; Helen describes her as adorable and reliable.
In our first session, I explained to Helen that I was an advanced
year intern completing my second field placement at the agency.
I told her I worked closely with my field supervisor to provide
the best care possible. She said that was fine, congratulated me
on advancing my career, and then began talking. I listened for
the reasons Helen came to speak with me. I asked Helen about
her community, which, she explained, centered on the activities
of the Greek Orthodox Church. She and John were married in
that church and attend services weekly. She expects that her
children will also eventually wed there. Her children, she
explained, are religious but do not regularly go to church
because they are very busy. She believes that the children are
too busy to be expected to help around the house. Helen shops,
cooks, and cleans for the family, and John sees to yard care and
maintains the family’s cars. When I asked whether the children
contributed to the finances of the home, Helen looked shocked
and said that John would find it deeply insulting to take money
from his children. As Helen described her life, I surmised that
the Petrakis family holds strong family bonds within a large and
supportive community. Helen is responsible for the care of
John’s 81-year-old widowed mother, Magda, who lives in an
apartment 30 minutes away. Until recently, Magda was self-
sufficient, coming for weekly family dinners and driving herself
shopping and to church. But 6 months ago, she fell and broke
her hip and was also recently diagnosed with early signs of
dementia. Through their church, Helen and John hired a reliable
and trusted woman to check in on Magda a couple of days each
week. Helen goes to see Magda on the other days, sometimes
twice in one day, depending on Magda’s needs. She buys her
food, cleans her home, pays her bills, and keeps track of her
medications. Helen says she would like to have the helper come
in more often, but she cannot afford it. The money to pay for
help is coming out of the couple’s vacations savings. Caring for
Magda makes Helen feel as if she is failing as a wife and
mother because she no longer has time to spend with her
husband and children. Helen sounded angry as she described the
amount of time she gave toward Magda’s care. She has stopped
going shopping and out to eat with friends because she can no
longer find the time. Lately, John has expressed displeasure
with meals at home, as Helen has been cooking less often and
brings home takeout. She sounded defeated when she described
an incident in which her son, Alec, expressed disappointment in
her because she could not provide him with clean laundry.
When she cried in response, he offered to help care for his
grandmother. Alec proposed moving in with Magda. Helen
wondered if asking Alec to stay with his grandmother might be
good for all of them. John and Alec had been arguing lately, and
Alec and his grandmother had always been very fond of each
other. Helen thought she could offer Alec the money she gave
Magda’s helper. I responded that I thought Helen and Alec were
using creative problem solving and utilizing their resources well
in crafting a plan. I said that Helen seemed to find good
solutions within her family and culture. Helen appeared
concerned as I said this, and I surmised that she was reluctant to
impose on her son because she and her husband 20 SESSIONS:
CASE HISTORIES • THE PETRAKIS FAMILY seemed to value
providing for their children’s needs rather than expecting them
to contribute resources. Helen ended the session agreeing to
consider the solution we discussed to ease the stress of caring
for Magda. The Petrakis Family Magda Petrakis: mother of John
Petrakis, 81 John Petrakis: father, 60 Helen Petrakis: mother, 52
Alec Petrakis: son, 27 Dmitra Petrakis: daughter, 23 Athina
Petrakis: daughter, 18 In our second session, Helen said that her
son again mentioned that he saw how overwhelmed she was and
wanted to help care for Magda. While Helen was not sure this
was the best idea, she saw how it might be helpful for a short
time. Nonetheless, her instincts were still telling her that this
could be a bad plan. Helen worried about changing the
arrangements as they were and seemed reluctant to step away
from her integral role in Magda’s care, despite the pain it was
causing her. In this session, I helped Helen begin to explore her
feelings and assumptions about her role as a caretaker in the
family. Helen did not seem able to identify her expectations of
herself as a caretaker. She did, however, resolve her
ambivalence about Alec’s offer to care for Magda. By the end of
the session, Helen agreed to have Alec live with his
grandmother. In our third session, Helen briskly walked into the
room and announced that Alec had moved in with Magda and it
was a disaster. Since the move, Helen had had to be at the
apartment at least once daily to intervene with emergencies.
Magda called Helen at work the day after Alec moved in to ask
Helen to pick up a refill of her medications at the pharmacy.
Helen asked to speak to Alec, and Magda said he had gone out
with two friends the night before and had not come home yet.
Helen left work immediately and drove to Magda’s home. Helen
angrily told me that she assumed that Magda misplaced the
medications, but then she began to cry and said that the
medications were not misplaced, they were really gone. When
she searched the apartment, Helen noticed that the cash box was
empty and that Magda’s checkbook was missing two checks.
Helen determined that Magda was robbed, but because she did
not want to frighten her, she decided not to report the crime.
Instead, Helen phoned the pharmacy and explained that her
mother-in-law, suffering from dementia, had accidently
destroyed her medication and would need refills. She called
Magda’s bank and learned that the checks had been cashed.
Helen cooked lunch for her motherin-law and ate it with her.
When a tired and disheveled Alec arrived back in the apartment,
Helen quietly told her son about the robbery and reinforced the
importance of remaining in the building with Magda at night.
Helen said that the events in Magda’s apartment were repeated 2
days later. By this time in the session Helen was furious. With
her face red with rage and her hands shaking, she told me that
all this was my fault for suggesting that Alec’s presence in the
apartment would benefit the family. Jewelry from Greece, which
had been in the family for generations, was now gone. Alec
would never be in this trouble if I had not told Helen he should
be permitted to live with his grandmother. Helen said she
should know better than to talk to a stranger about private
matters. Helen cried, and as I sat and listened to her sobs, I was
not sure whether to let her cry, give her a tissue, or interrupt
her. As the session was nearing the end, Helen quickly told me
that Alec has struggled with maintaining sobriety since he was a
teen. He is currently on 2 years’ probation for possession and
had recently completed a rehabilitation program. Helen said she
now realized Alec was stealing from his grandmother to support
his drug habit. She could not possibly tell her husband because
he would hurt and humiliate Alec, and she would not consider
telling the police. Helen’s solution was to remove the valuables
and medications from the apartment and to visit twice a day to
bring supplies and medicine and check on Alec and Magda.
After this session, it was unclear how to proceed with Helen. I
asked my field instructor for help. I explained that I had offered
support for a possible solution to Helen’s difficulties and stress.
In rereading the progress notes in Helen’s chart, I realized I had
misinterpreted Helen’s reluctance to ask Alec to move in with
his grandmother. I felt terrible about pushing Helen into acting
outside of her own instincts. My field instructor reminded me
that I had not forced Helen to act as she had and that no one was
responsible for the actions of another person. She told me that
beginning social workers do make mistakes and that my errors
were part of a learning process and were not irreparable. I was
reminded that advising Helen, or any client, is ill-advised. My
field instructor expressed concern about my ethical and legal
obligations to protect Magda. She suggested that I call the
county office on aging and adult services to research my duty to
report, and to speak to the agency director about my ethical and
legal obligations in this case. In our fourth session, Helen
apologized for missing a previous appointment with me. She
said she awoke the morning of the appointment with tightness in
her chest and a feeling that her heart was racing. John drove
Helen to the emergency room at the hospital in which she
works. By the time Helen got to the hospital, she could not 21
SESSIONS: CASE HISTORIES • THE PETRAKIS FAMILY
catch her breath and thought she might pass out. The hospital
ran tests but found no conclusive organic reason to explain
Helen’s symptoms. I asked Helen how she felt now. She said
that since her visit to the hospital, she continues to experience
shortness of breath, usually in the morning when she is getting
ready to begin her day. She said she has trouble staying asleep,
waking two to four times each night, and she feels tired during
the day. Working is hard because she is more forgetful than she
has ever been. Her back is giving her trouble, too. Helen said
that she feels like her body is one big tired knot. I suggested
that her symptoms could indicate anxiety and she might want to
consider seeing a psychiatrist for an evaluation. I told Helen it
would make sense, given the pressures in her life, that she felt
anxiety. I said that she and I could develop a treatment plan to
help her address the anxiety. Helen’s therapy goals include
removing Alec from Magda’s apartment and speaking to John
about a safe and supported living arrangement for Magda.
Bowen Family Systems Theory and Practice: Illustration and
Critique By Jenny Brown This paper will give an overview of
Murray Bowen’s theory of family systems. It will describe the
model’s development and outline its core clinical components.
The practice of therapy will be described as well as recent
developments within the model. Some key criticisms will be
raised, followed by a case example which highlights the
therapeutic focus of Bowen’s approach. This is the author’s
version of the work. It is posted here by permission of
Australian Academic Press for personal use, not for
redistribution. The definitive version was published in
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy
(ANZJFT) Vol.20 No.2 1999 pp 94-103). Introduction Murray
Bowen's family systems theory (shortened to 'Bowen theory'
from 1974) was one of the first comprehensive theories of
family systems functioning (Bowen, 1966, 1978, Kerr and
Bowen, 1988). While it has received sporadic attention in
Australia and New Zealand, it continues to be a central
influence in the practice of family therapy in North America. It
is possible that some local family therapists have been
influenced by many of Bowen's ideas without the connection
being articulated. For example, the writing of Guerin (1976,
1987), Carter and McGoldrick (1980, 1988), Lerner (1986,
1988, 1990, 1993) and Schnarch (1991, 1997) all have
Bowenian Theory at the heart of their conceptualisations. There
is a pervasive view amongst many proponents of Bowen's work
that his theory needs to be experienced rather than taught (Kerr,
1991). While this may be applicable if one can be immersed in
the milieu of a Bowenian training institute, such an option, to
my knowledge, is not available in this country. Bowen's own
writings have also been charged with being tedious and difficult
to read (Carter, 1991). Hence it seems pertinent to present this
influential theory in an accessible format. Development Of The
Model Murray Bowen was born in 1913 in Tennessee and died
in 1990. He trained as a psychiatrist and originally practised
within the psychoanalytic model. At the Menninger Clinic in the
late 1940s, he had started to involve mothers in the
investigation and treatment of schizophrenic patients. His
devotion to his own psychoanalytic training was set aside after
his move to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in
1954, as he began to shift from an individual focus to an
appreciation of the dimensions of families as systems. At the
NIMH, Bowen began to include more family members in his
research and psychotherapy with schizophrenic patients. In 1959
he moved to Georgetown University and established the
Georgetown Family Centre (where he was director until his
death). It was here that his developing theory was extended to
less severe emotional problems. Between 1959 and 1962 he
undertook detailed research into families across several
generations. Rather than developing a theory about pathology,
Bowen focused on what he saw as the common patterns of all
'human emotional systems'. With such a focus on the qualitative
similarities of all families, Bowen was known to say frequently,
'There is a little schizophrenia in all of us' (Kerr and Bowen,
1988). In 1966, Bowen published the first 'orderly presentation'
of his developing ideas (Bowen, 1978: xiii). Around the same
time he used his concepts to guide his intervention in a minor
emotional crisis in his own extended family, an intervention
which he describes as a spectacular breakthrough for him in
theory and practice (Bowen, 1972 in Bowen, 1978). In 1967, he
surprised a national family therapy conference by talking about
his own family experience, rather than presenting the
anticipated formal paper. Bowen proceeded to encourage
students to work on triangles and intergenerational patterns in
their own families of origin rather than undertaking individual
psychotherapy. From this generation of trainees have come the
current leaders of Bowenian Therapy, such as Michael Kerr at
the Georgetown Family Center, Philip Guerin at the Center for
Family Learning, Betty Carter at the Family Institute of
Westchester, and Monica McGoldrick at the [Multicultural]
Family Institute of New Jersey. While the core concepts of
Bowen's theory have changed little over two decades, there have
been significant expansions: the focus on life cycle stages
(Carter and McGoldrick, 1980, 1988) and the incorporation of a
feminist lens (Carter, Walters, Papp, Silverstein, 1988; Lerner,
1983; Bograd, 1987). The Theory Bowen's focus was on
patterns that develop in families in order to defuse anxiety. A
key generator of anxiety in families is the perception of either
too much closeness or too great a distance in a relationship. The
degree of anxiety in any one family will be determined by the
current levels of external stress and the sensitivities to
particular themes that have been transmitted down the
generations. If family members do not have the capacity to
think through their responses to relationship dilemmas, but
rather react anxiously to perceived emotional demands, a state
of chronic anxiety or reactivity may be set in place. The main
goal of Bowenian therapy is to reduce chronic anxiety by 1.
facilitating awareness of how the emotional system functions;
and 2. increasing levels of differentiation, where the focus is on
making changes for the self rather than on trying to change
others. Eight interlocking concepts make up Bowen's theory.
This paper will give an overview of seven of these. The eighth
attempts to link his theory to the evolution of society, and has
little relevance to the practice of his therapy. [However, Wylie
(1991) points out in her biographical piece following Bowen's
death that this interest in evolutionary process distinguishes
Bowen from other family therapy pioneers. Bowen viewed
himself as a scientist, with the lofty aim of developing a theory
that accounted for the entire range of human behaviour and its
origins.] 1 - Emotional Fusion and Differentiation of Self 2 -
Triangles 3 - Nuclear Family Emotional System 3a. Couple
Conflict 3b. Symptoms in a Spouse 3c. Symptoms in a Child 4 -
Family Projection Process 5 - Emotional Cutoff 6 - Multi-
generational Transmission Process 7 - Sibling Positions 1 -
Emotional Fusion and Differentiation of Self 'Fusion' or 'lack of
differentiation' is where individual choices are set aside in the
service of achieving harmony within the system. Fusion can be
expressed either as: * a sense of intense responsibility for
another's reactions, or * by emotional 'cutoff' from the tension
within a relationship (Kerr and Bowen, 1988; Herz Brown,
1991). Bowen's research led him to suggest that varying degrees
of fusion are discernible in all families. 'Differentiation', by
contrast, is described as the capacity of the individual to
function autonomously by making self directed choices, while
remaining emotionally connected to the intensity of a
significant relationship system (Kerr and Bowen, 1988).
Bowen's notion of fusion has a different focus to Minuchin's
concept of enmeshment, which is based on a lack of boundary
between sub-systems (Minuchin, 1974). The structural terms
'enmeshment' and 'disengagement' are in fact the twin polarities
of Bowen's 'fusion'. Fusion describes each person's reactions
within a relationship, rather than the overall structure of family
relationships. Hence, anxiously cutting off the relationship is as
much a sign of fusion as intense submissiveness. A person in a
fused relationship reacts immediately (as if with a reflex, knee
jerk response) to the perceived demands of another person,
without being able to think through the choices or talk over
relationship matters directly with the other person. Energy is
invested in taking things personally (ensuring the emotional
comfort of another), or in distancing oneself (ensuring one's
own). The greater a family's tendency to fuse, the less
flexibility it will have in adapting to stress. Bowen developed
the idea of a 'differentiation of self scale' to assist in teaching
this concept. He points out that this was not designed as an
actual instrument for assigning people to particular levels (Kerr
and Bowen, 1988: 97-98). Bowen maintains that the speculative
nature of estimating a level of differentiation is compounded by
factors such as stress levels, individual differences in reactivity
to different stressors, and the degree of contact individuals have
with their extended family. At one end of the scale, hypothetical
'complete differentiation' is said to exist in a person who has
resolved their emotional attachment to their family (ie. shifted
out of their roles in relationship triangles) and can therefore
function as an individual within the family group. Bowen did
acknowledge that this was a lifelong process and that 'total'
differentiation is not possible to attain. 2 - Triangles Bowen
described triangles as the smallest stable relationship unit (Kerr
and Bowen, 1988: 135). The process of triangling is central to
his theory. (Some people use the term 'triangulation', deriving
from Minuchin (1974: 102), but Bowen always spoke of
'triangling'.) Triangling is said to occur when the inevitable
anxiety in a dyad is relieved by involving a vulnerable third
party who either takes sides or provides a detour for the anxiety
(Lerner, 1988; James, 1989; Guerin, Fogarty, Fay and Kautto,
1996). An example of this pattern would be when Person A in a
marriage begins feeling uncomfortable with too much closeness
to Person B. S/he may begin withdrawing, perhaps to another
activity such as work (the third point of the triangle). Person B
then pursues Person A, which results in increased withdrawal to
the initial triangled-in person or activity. Person B then feels
neglected and seeks out an ally who will sympathise with
his/her sense of exclusion. This in turn leads to Person A
feeling like the odd one out and moving anxiously closer to
Person B. Under stress, the triangling process feeds on itself
and interlocking triangles are formed throughout the system.
This can spill over into the wider community, when family
members find allies, or enemies to unite against, such as
doctors, teachers and therapists. Under calm conditions it is
difficult to identify triangles but they emerge clearly under
stress. Triangles are linked closely with Bowen's concept of
differentiation, in that the greater the degree of fusion in a
relationship, the more heightened is the pull to preserve
emotional stability by forming a triangle. Bowen did not
suggest that the process of triangling was necessarily
dysfunctional, but the concept is a useful way of grasping the
notion that the original tension gets acted out elsewhere.
Triangling can become problematic when a third party's
involvement distracts the members of a dyad from resolving
their relationship impasse. If a third party is drawn in, the focus
shifts to criticising or worrying about the new outsider, which
in turn prevents the original complainants from resolving their
tension. According to Bowen, triangles tend to repeat
themselves across generations. When one member of a
relationship triangle departs or dies, another person can be
drawn into the same role (eg. 'villain', 'rescuer', 'victim', 'black
sheep', 'martyr'). For example, in my own family of origin I
found myself moving into the role of peacemaker after the death
of my mother, who had mediated the tension between my father
and brother. This ongoing triangle served to detour the anxiety
that had been played out between fathers and sons in the family
over the generations. 3 - Nuclear Family Emotional System In
positing the 'nuclear family emotional system', Bowen focuses
on the impact of 'undifferentiation' on the emotional functioning
of a single generation family. He asserts that relationship
fusion, which leads to triangling, is the fuel for symptom
formation which is manifested in one of three categories. These
are: a. couple conflict; b. illness in a spouse; c. projection of a
problem onto one or more children. Each of these is expanded
below. 3A. COUPLE CONFLICT The single generation unit
usually starts with a dyad - a couple who, according to Bowen,
will be at approximately equal levels of differentiation (ie. both
have the same degree of need to be validated through the
relationship). Bowen believed that permission to disagree is one
of the most important contracts between individuals in an
intimate relationship (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 188). In a fused
relationship, partners interpret the emotional state of the other
as their responsibility, and the other's stated disagreement as a
personal affront to them. A typical pattern in such emotionally
intense relationships is a cycle of closeness followed by conflict
to create distance, which in turn is followed by the couple
making up and resuming the intense closeness. This pattern is a
'conflictual cocoon' (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 192), where
anxiety is bound within the conflict cycle without spilling over
to involve children. Bowen suggested the following three ways
in which couple conflict can be functional for a fused
relationship, in which 'each person is attempting to become
more whole through the other' (Lederer and Lewis, 1991). 1.
Conflict can provide a strong sense of emotional contact with
the important other. 2. Conflict can justify people's maintaining
a comfortable distance from each other without feeling guilty
about it. 3. Conflict can allow one person to project anxieties
they have about themselves onto the other, thereby preserving
their positive view of self (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 192). 3B.
SYMPTOMS IN A SPOUSE In a fused relationship, where each
partner looks to the other's qualities to fit his / her learned
manner of relating to significant others, a pattern of reciprocity
can be set in motion that pushes each spouse's role to opposite
extremes. Drawing from his analytic background, Bowen
described this fusion as 'the reciprocal side of each spouse's
transference' (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 170). For example, what
may start as an overly responsible spouse feeling compatible
with a more dependent partner, can escalate to an increasingly
controlling spouse with the other giving up any sense of
contributing to the relationship. Both are equally
undifferentiated in that they are defining themselves according
to the reactions of the other; however the spouse who makes the
most adjustments in the self in order to preserve relationship
harmony is said by Bowen to be prone to developing symptoms.
The person who gets polarised in the under functioning position
is most vulnerable to symptoms of helplessness such as
depression, substance abuse and chronic pain. The over
functioning person might also be the one to develop symptoms,
as s/he becomes overburdened by attempts to make things 'right'
for others. 3C. SYMPTOMS IN A CHILD The third symptom of
fusion in a family is when a child develops behavioural or
emotional problems. This comes under Bowen's fourth
theoretical concept, the Family Projection Process. 4 - Family
Projection Process In the previous two categories the couple
relationship is the focus of anxiety without it significantly
impacting on the functioning of the next generation. By
contrast, the family projection process describes how children
develop symptoms when they get caught up in the previous
generation's anxiety about relationships. The child with the
least emotional separation from his/her parents is said to be the
most vulnerable to developing symptoms. Bowen describes this
as occurring when a child responds anxiously to the tension in
the parents' relationship, which in turn is mistaken for a
problem in the child. A detouring triangle is thus set in motion,
as attention and protectiveness are shifted to the child. Within
this cycle of reciprocal anxiety, a child becomes more
demanding or more impaired. An example would be when an
illness in a child distracts one parent from the pursuit of
closeness in the marriage. As tension in the marriage is
relieved, both spouses become invested in treating their child's
condition, which may in turn become chronic or psychosomatic.
As in all of Bowen's constructs, 'intergenerational projection' is
said to occur in all families in varying degrees. Many
intergenerational influences may determine which child
becomes the focus of family anxiety and at what stage of the
life cycle this occurs. The impact of crises and their timing also
influences the vulnerability of certain children. Bowen viewed
traumatic events as significant in highlighting the family
processes rather than as actually 'causing' them. 5 - Emotional
Cutoff Bowen describes 'emotional cutoff' as the way people
manage the intensity of fusion between the generations. A
'cutoff' can be achieved through physical distance or through
forms of emotional withdrawal. Bowen distinguishes between
'breaking away' from the family and 'growing away' from the
family. 'Growing away' is viewed as part of differentiation -
adult family members follow independent goals while also
recognising that they are part of their family system. A 'cutoff'
is more like an escape; people 'decide' to be completely
different to their family of origin. While immediate pressure
might be relieved by cutoff, patterns of reactivity in intense
relationships remain unchanged and versions of the past, or its
mirror image, are repeated. Bowen proposes that: If one does
not see himself as part of the system, his only options are either
to get others to change or to withdraw. If one sees himself as
part of the system, he has a new option: to stay in contact with
others and change self (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 272-273).
'Cutoffs' are not always dramatic rifts. An example of a covert
emotional cutoff would be one family member maintaining an
anxious silence in the face of another's anger. The pull to
restore harmony overwhelms the ability to stay in contact with
the issue that has been raised. A central hypothesis of Bowen's
theory is that the more people maintain emotional contact with
the previous generation, the less reactive they will be in current
relationships. Conversely, when there are emotional cutoffs, the
current family group can experience intense emotional pressure
without effective escape valves. This family tension is like
'walking on eggshells', as issues which remain unresolved from
the cutoff are carefully avoided. Triangling provides a detour,
as family members enlist the support of others for their own
position in relation to the cutoff. 6 - Multi-generational
Transmission Process This concept of Bowen's theory describes
how patterns, themes and positions (roles) in a triangle are
passed down from generation to generation through the
projection from parent to child which was described earlier. The
impact will be different for each child depending on the degree
of triangling they have with their parents. Bowen's focus on at
least three generations of a family when dealing with a
presenting symptom is certainly a trademark of his theory. The
attention to family patterns over time is not just an evaluative
tool, but an intervention that helps family members get
sufficient distance from their current struggle with symptoms to
see how they might change their own part in the transmission
of anxiety over the generations. As Monica McGoldrick (1995:
20) writes in applying Bowenian concepts: By learning about
your family and its history and getting to know what made
family members tick, how they related, and where they got
stuck, you can consider your own role, not simply as victim or
reactor to your experiences but as an active player in
interactions that repeat themselves. 7 - Sibling Positions
Employing Walter Toman's (1976) sibling profiles, Bowen
considered that sibling position could provide useful
information in understanding the roles individuals tend to take
in relationships. For example, Toman's profiles describe eldest
children as more likely to take on responsibility and leadership,
with younger siblings more comfortable being dependent and
allowing others to make decisions. Middle children are
described as having more flexibility to shift between
responsibility and dependence and 'only' children are seen as
being responsible, and having greater access to the adult world.
Bowen noted that these generalised traits are not universally
applicable and that it is possible for a younger sibling to
become the 'functional eldest'. Bowen was especially interested
in which sibling position in a family is most vulnerable to
triangling with parents. It may be that a parent identifies
strongly with a child in the same sibling position as their own,
or that a previous cross generational triangle (eg. an eldest child
aligned with a grandparent against a parent) may be repeated. If
one sibling in the previous generation suffered a serious illness
or died, it is more likely that the child of the present generation
in the same sibling position will be viewed as more vulnerable
and therefore more likely to detour tensions from the parental
dyad. Helping the client understand and think beyond the
limitations of their own sibling position and role is a goal of
Bowenian family of origin work. Clients are encouraged to
consider how assumptions about relationships are fuelled by
their sibling role experience. As with other aspects of Bowen's
theory, the impact of gender and ethnicity on sibling role is not
considered. For example, there is no exploration of how a
family's ethnicity influences which birth order position and
which gender is more valued, or how the gender of any sibling
position tends to influence whether the role is primarily
relational (female), or task oriented (male). The Model In
Clinical Practice Bowen's is not a technique focused model
which incorporates specific descriptions of how to structure
therapy sessions. The goal of therapy is to assist family
members towards greater levels of differentiation, where there
is less blaming, decreased reactivity and increased
responsibility for self in the emotional system. Perhaps the most
distinctive aspects of Bowen's therapy are his emphasis on the
therapist's own family of origin work, the central role of the
therapist in directing conversation and his minimal focus on
children in the process of therapy. Bowen views therapy in three
broad stages. 1. Stage one aims to reduce clients' anxiety about
the symptom by encouraging them to learn how the symptom is
part of their pattern of relating. 2. Stage two focuses adult
clients on 'self' issues so as to increase their levels of
differentiation. Clients are helped to resist the pull of what
Bowen termed the 'togetherness force' in the family (Bowen,
1971 in Bowen, 1978: 218). 3. In the latter phases of therapy,
adult clients are coached in differentiating themselves from
their family of origin, the assumption being that gains in
differentiation will automatically flow over into decreased
anxiety and greater self-responsibility within the nuclear family
system. Clinical Practice : The Role of the Therapist The role of
the therapist is to connect with a family without becoming
emotionally reactive. Emphasis is given to the therapist
maintaining a 'differentiated' stance. This means that the
therapist is not drawn into an over responsible / under
responsible reciprocity in attempts to be helpful. A therapist
position of calm and interested investigation is important, so
that the family begins to learn about itself as an emotional
system. Bowen instructs therapists to move out of a healing or
helping position, where families passively wait for a cure, 'to
getting the family into position to accept responsibility for its
own change' (Bowen, 1971 in Bowen, 1978: 246). Bowen warns
of the problems of therapists losing sight of their part in the
system of interactions, where they may be inducted into a
mediating role in a triangle with the family. Hence there is a
high priority given to understanding and making changes within
the therapist's own family of origin. In training, the emphasis is
on the trainees' level of differentiation, and not on therapeutic
technique. The therapist's resolution of family of origin issues
is reflected in the: ...ability to be in emotional contact with a
difficult, emotionally charged problem and not feel compelled
to preach about what others should do, not rush in to fix the
problem and not pretend to be detached by emotionally
insulating oneself (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 108). Clinical
Practice : Therapist Activity The therapist is active in directing
the therapeutic conversation. Enactments are halted so as to
prevent the escalation of clients' anxiety. Clients are asked to
talk directly to the therapist so that other family members can
"listen and 'really hear' without reacting emotionally, for the
first time in their lives together" (Bowen, 1971 in Bowen, 1978:
248). Bowen himself would avoid couple interaction in the room
and concentrate on interviewing one spouse in the presence of
the other. Bowen clearly avoided asking for emotional
responses, which he saw as less likely to lead to differentiation
of self, preferring mostly to ask for 'thoughts', 'reactions' and
'impressions' (Bowen, 1971, in Bowen, 1978: 226). He called
this activity 'externalizing the thinking of each client in the
presence of the other' (Bowen, 1975 in Bowen, 1978: 314).
Clinical Practice : Children in Bowen's Therapy A surprising
feature of Bowen's family therapy is his tendency to minimise
the involvement of children. While Bowen might include
children in the beginning stage of therapy, he would soon
dismiss them, focusing on the adults as the most influential
members of a family system (Bowen, 1975 in Bowen, 1978:
298). Excluding a child from therapy responsibility is viewed as
a detriangling manoeuvre. When parents cannot use the child as
a 'triangle person' for issues between them, and the therapist
resists taking the replacement role in the triangle, parents can
begin differentiating their respective selves from one other.
Clinical Practice : Family Evaluation The beginning sessions in
Bowenian therapy focus on information gathering in order to
form ideas about the family's emotional processes, which
concurrently provides information to family members about the
presenting problem in its systemic context. The presenting
problem is tracked through the history of the nuclear family and
into the extended family system. A multigenerational genogram
is a useful tool for recording this information (McGoldrick and
Gerson, 1985; Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 306-313). The therapist
looks for clues about the emotional process of the particular
family, including: patterns of regulating closeness and distance,
how anxiety is dealt with in the system, what triangles get
activated, the degree of adaptivity to changes and stressful
events, and any signs of emotional 'cutoff'. Information
collected is acknowledged to be extremely subjective,
especially when extended family are discussed; but stories
about past generations are viewed as useful clues to the roles
people occupy in triangles and the tensions that remain
unresolved from their families of origin. If for example, a
member of the extended family is described as 'the rebel', the
therapist explores what events gave rise to this label, who else
has occupied this role across the generations and how triangles
formed around family crises involving 'rebellion'. Calming
family members' anxiety in the early stages of therapy might
involve helping them to make connections between the
development of symptoms and potent themes in a family's
history. Another aim will be to loosen the central triangle that
has formed around, and maintains, the presenting problem.
Teaching clients about systems concepts as they operate in their
own family is part of therapy at this stage. This does not mean
attempting to convince people to do things differently but to
encourage family members to see beyond their biases so that it
is possible for them to consider each person's part in the family
patterns. Clinical Practice : Questions that Encourage
Differentiation The therapist asks questions that assume that the
adult client can be responsible for his / her reactiveness to the
other. An example would be, "How do you understand the way
you seem to take your child's acting out so personally?" In
response to such questions, family members are encouraged to
take an 'I' position where they speak about how they view the
problem, without attacking, or defending against, another
family member (Bowen, 1971a in Bowen, 1978: 252; Goodnow
and Lim, 1997). Clients are taught to make personal statements
about their thoughts and feelings in order to facilitate a greater
sense of responsibility in a relationship. For example, an
accusatory statement such as, 'You are so selfish to cause this
much worry for your parents!', is shifted to, 'I am really
concerned that this might affect your school grades'. The parent
is encouraged to 'own' their worries, rather than to project their
anxieties through blaming statements. Developing such a 'self-
focus' is said to be crucial in lowering anxiety and enabling
'person to person' relationships where each family member can
think about the part they play in problematic interactions.
Clinical Practice : Creating a Multigenerational Lens Bowen's
multigenerational model goes beyond the view that the past
influences the present, to the view that patterns of relating in
the past continue in the present family system (Herz Brown,
1991). Hence the therapist uses questions to encourage clients
to think about the connection between their present problem and
the ways previous generations have dealt with similar
relationship issues. For example, if the onset of a symptom
followed a death in the family, the therapist asks about how
grief has been dealt with in previous generations. Questions
seek to uncover family belief systems as well as the way
relationships have shifted in response to loss. Tracking
symptoms and exploring related themes over at least three
generations makes it more difficult for individuals to blame one
another for individual deficiencies. As therapist and family
members see how patterns repeat over generations, it is possible
to identify the 'automatic' reactions of family members towards
each other: The ability to act on the basis of more awareness of
relationship process (not blaming self or others, but seeing the
part each plays) can, if done repeatedly in important
relationships, lead to some reduction in emotional reactivity and
chronic anxiety (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 132). Clinical Practice
: Detriangling This is probably the central technique in
Bowenian therapy. The client is first helped to recognise both
the subtle and the more obvious ways that they are 'triangled' by
others, and the ways in which they attempt to triangle others in
their turn. The therapist uses questions to facilitate the family
members' awareness of their roles in family triangles. Simple
open ended tracking questions, using what Herz Brown (1991)
terms the four 'Ws' (who, what, when and where) help clients to
become 'detectives' in their own interpersonal systems. It is
often very difficult for family members to identify the triangles
they participate in, and the sometimes covert ways in which
they detour anxiety. An example would be a client who was
struggling to understand her negativity towards her father.
When questioning included her mother's role in these emotions,
the client began to see that her view of her father was
influenced by her position in a triangle. As her mother's ally in
this triangle, she viewed her father as the inadequate husband
who left her mother feeling needy. Once triangles have been
identified, family members are helped to plan ways of
communicating a neutral position to others, leaving the dyad to
communicate directly with each other. The goal is for a family
member to find a less reactive position in the face of the other's
anxiety. This will require different stances in different systems,
ranging from refusing to discuss the deficiencies of another
behind his/her back, to reversing one's usual reaction in a
triangle. For example, when the predictable pattern in the
family system is to keep distance between those who haven't
been able to work out their problems, the therapist helps a
family member to plan strategies that shift their usual role in
maintaining the avoidance. The family member might encourage
more involvement between the conflictual twosome, or change
the subject when invited to discuss the conflict. Reversal is a
key detriangling technique. When for example a family member
A complains about how uncaring another person is, person C
reverses the predictable sympathetic response, substituting a
casual comment about how considerate person B seems for not
putting demands on A's time and energy. Unlike a strategic
intervention, the goal of any detriangling stance is not to
change the other's relationship but to express one's neutrality
about it. A calm and thoughtful neutral stance prevents one
from anxiously reacting to the tension of another relationship by
'taking sides'. Clinical Practice : Coaching: Family Therapy
with an Individual Another distinguishing feature of Bowen's
model is its validity in working with a single adult. The term
'coaching' describes the work of the therapist giving input and
support for adult clients who are attempting to develop greater
differentiation in their families of origin. Clients should feel in
charge of their own change efforts, with the therapist acting as a
consultant. Bowen thought that a person's efforts to be more
differentiated would be more productive when the focus shifted
away from the intensity of the nuclear family to the previous
generation. The emphasis is on self-directed efforts to
detriangle from family of origin patterns. An individual's efforts
can modify a triangle, which in turn ripples through to change
in the whole extended family. Bowen described 'coaching' as
'family psychotherapy with one family member' (Bowen, 1971
in Bowen, 1978: 233). This therapy takes on the flavour of
teaching, as clients learn about the predicable patterns of
triangles. The therapist supports their efforts in returning to
their families to observe and learn about these patterns. Clients
practise controlling their emotional reactivity in their family
and report their struggles and progress in following sessions.
During family of origin coaching, clients use letters, telephone
calls, visits and research about previous generations to gain a
systemic perspective on their family's emotional processes and a
sense of their own inheritance of these patterns. The therapist
prepares clients for the anxiety they will encounter if they shift
from their customary roles in their families of origin. Any such
changes will inevitably disturb the predictable balance of family
patterns and therefore heighten anxiety and resistance. Change
is viewed as a three step process where: a. one takes a new
position, b. family members react and c. the new stance is
maintained in the face of pressure to revert to the original
position (Herz Brown, 1991). Bowen (1978) emphasised that it
is what happens in step 'c' that really determines whether
change occurs. Current Developments Bowen's model has been
adopted and developed by many prominent therapists. Rather
than attempt to summarise all of these developments, I shall
focus on the applications of the model by Betty Carter and
Monica McGoldrick which have influenced the practice of the
Family Institute of Westchester in New York and the Family
Institute of New Jersey. Since the early 1980s, the work of
Carter, McGoldrick and their colleagues has expanded Bowen's
framework to include attention to the family life cycle (Carter
and McGoldrick, 1980, 1988.) As well as the 'vertical' flow of
anxiety through the generations, Carter included an assessment
of 'horizontal' stress as families move through various stages of
the life cycle. Vertical and horizontal patterns converge, as
multigenerational tensions impact on the ways that life cycle
tasks and disruptions are negotiated. The stress of life cycle
changes affects the choice of family of origin issues focused
upon in the current generation. Using a life cycle perspective,
symptom development is viewed in the context of an unresolved
adjustment to a life cycle task. Acknowledging the significance
of gender, race, ethnicity and class on a family's progression
through life cycle stages was an important development in
family assessment (eg. McGoldrick, Pearce and Giordano, 1982;
Carter et al., 1988; McGoldrick, Anderson and Walsh, 1988;
Herz Brown, 1991). This much broader focus provides what
Carter has called a 'multi-contextual lens'. These variables are
part of the context of the family's 'horizontal' story and underlie
the potent themes of a family's multigenerational legacy.
Patterns of gender across the generations are viewed as
powerfully contributing to the roles that people occupy in the
family emotional system. The inclusion of gender sensitivity in
a Bowenian framework means that the therapist helps clients to
look not only at patterns of relating over the generations but
also to critique the roles they occupy in relationships. Such a
focus is not confined to the family system's gender expectations
but includes questions that look for connections to socially
defined gender roles. Betty Carter, in developing her work from
the women's project (Carter et al., 1988), has outlined how
Bowen's key concepts (fusion, differentiation and triangles)
need to be viewed differently from a feminist position. Gender
roles will determine the way men and women express fusion,
with women socialised to be dependent and approval seeking
and men socialised to withdraw and emotionally 'cut off'. Carter
asserts that the concept of fusion can easily be misused to
pathologise the 'over-involved female' while overlooking the
distant male. With a 'gender sensitive lens', a Bowenian
therapist validates rather than pathologises the relational
concerns of women and explores ways that men can take
responsibilities in this sphere. The distancing of a male will be
seen not only as a symptom of lack of differentiation but also as
a socially prescribed reaction. Likewise, the nature of a
relationship triangle is influenced by gender related behaviour.
Carter illustrates the different ways a therapist might view a
triangle with and without the feminist lens. The triangle of a
husband in a distant position, with his wife and mother in
conflict, would be viewed by a feminist Bowenian therapist as 'a
case of two women bumping into each other as each tries to
carry out her family responsibilities in the face of the man's
withdrawal' (Carter et al., 1988). Interventions will respect the
women's roles and dilemmas and focus on how the husband can
choose to be more involved in both significant relationships.
Without such a lens, the detriangling strategy would typically
be to have the husband set more boundaries with his mother -
which has the effect of preserving the gendered stereotype of
the 'possessive' mother in law. The therapist is challenged to
recognise that no intervention is free from societal constructs in
regard to gender and power (including race, ethnicity, class and
sexual orientation) so that 'every intervention will have a
different and special meaning for each sex' (Carter et al., 1988).
Thus therapists expand their questioning to ask about the
relational impact of each spouse's income and ethnicity. The
organisation of child care and housework is also explored.
Therapists are encouraged to challenge men's excuses that work
prevents family involvement and women's expectations about
financial support (Carter, 1996). An awareness of the impact of
therapists' own value system on their therapy is also stressed
(Carter, 1992). For Bowenian therapists in the nineties, the core
of Bowen's theory of symptom development and change remains
unaltered. What has been added is attention to how wider socio-
political issues of power and hierarchy are played out as couple
or family problems. A broad range of systemic techniques such
as restorying and circular questioning can readily be
incorporated into the model (Carter and McGoldrick, 1988).
Critique Of Bowen's Model Bowen's model of family therapy is
perhaps most distinctive for its depth of evaluation beyond
symptoms in the present. Its focus on emotional processes over
the generations and on individuals' differentiation within their
systemic context offers family therapists a multi-level view that
has usually been reserved for psychodynamic therapies. Bowen's
model pays attention to the emotional interaction of therapists
and their clients and expects that the process of therapy must in
some way be applied to the therapists' own lives, so that they
are able to remain meta to the client family system. A number
of Bowenian therapists acknowledge that the wider focus of
Bowen's model can be a drawback in that many clients want
only to address symptom relief in the nuclear family (Young,
1991). For the Bowenian therapist, symptom reduction is seen
only as the ground work from which families can proceed less
anxiously towards working on detriangling and improved levels
of differentiation. Herein lies a clear danger of discrepancies in
client and therapist goals. While Bowenian therapy has been
embraced by some leading feminist therapists, such as Betty
Carter and Harriet Goldhor Lerner, it has also received its share
of criticism from a feminist perspective. Deborah Leupnitz
(1988) points out that Bowen, along with other male family
therapy pioneers, has paid rather too much attention to the
mother's contribution to symptom development in the child.
Some support for this can be found by scanning the index to
Kerr and Bowen (1988), where 'fathers' do not warrant a
category yet 'mothers' are referenced in relation to families of
schizophrenics, levels of differentiation in the child, and their
role in triangles (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 395). [The index to
Bowen's own collected papers, Family Therapy in Clinical
Practice, however, includes one reference to 'fathers' and none
to 'mothers': Eds.] A perceived over-investment by a mother in
her child is seen as a sign of undifferentiation. Unlike the
current feminist therapists who use the Bowenian model,
Murray Bowen (along with many of his Georgetown colleagues)
failed to contextualise maternal behaviour. Patriarchal
assumptions about male / female roles and family organisation
are not acknowledged or critiqued, which leaves women
vulnerable to having their socially prescribed roles
pathologised. Women are readily labelled as 'over concerned',
and their active, relational role in families too easily labelled as
'fused' and 'undifferentiated'. There is no questioning of societal
norms that can be seen to '[school] females into
undifferentiation by teaching them always to put others' needs
first' (Leupnitz, 1988: 43). The women's project in family
therapy asserts that a model such as Bowen's pressures the
woman to 'back off' while placating and courting the distant
male (Carter et al., 1988). Carter asserts that this is not only
biased against women but disrespectful of men since the model
assumes men's limitations in terms of emotional engagement in
therapy and family relationships. An ongoing challenge for
feminist Bowenian therapists is to reconstruct a therapy
language of intimacy and attachment that is not misused to
imply dysfunction (Bograd, 1987; Carter et al., 1988). Another
criticism that flows from the biases of Bowen's 'male defined'
terminology, is that his is a therapy lacking in attention to
feelings (Luepnitz, 1988). It is asserted that Bowen's therapy
focuses on being rational and objective in relation to emotional
processes, which relegates to a low priority the expression of
emotions in therapy. My own experience of this model, with its
invitation to explore the 'tapestry' of one's family across the
generations, is that it is an emotionally intense therapy. While
Bowen may emphasise the goal of helping the client learn about
their family's emotional processes, in practice it is the
experience of the emotions, embedded in family of origin
relationships that is a key motivator for the client to undertake
family of origin work. I recall Betty Carter, in asking a man
about his relationship with his own father, tapping deeply into
emotions that motivated him to make changes in his ways of
relating. Case Example The Barret family were referred for
family therapy by the individual therapist of the sixteen year
old anorectic daughter, Tanya. Tanya had been hospitalised by
her doctor the previous month when her weight levels were
considered life threatening. To date the family had not been
involved in her treatment but were now feeling that they could
no longer remain on the sidelines when the risk levels were so
high. Hospitalisation had also intensified family reactivity, with
Tanya blaming her father for allowing her freedom to be taken
away, both parents feeling angry that she could allow herself to
fall so low, and her nineteen year old sister questioning how
Tanya could put her family through so much worry. Stage 1:
Calming the system When a family member is exhibiting life
threatening symptoms, it is not realistic to expect that anxiety
can be lowered to non reactive levels. In the case of the Barret
family my goal was to take the focus away from Tanya's weight
sufficiently to enable the family to explore each of their roles in
the anxious family patterns. The other systems involved in her
treatment were framed as providing her with support and
monitoring the risk of her symptoms. She received individual
therapy where the therapist focused on supporting her through
adolescent life cycle tasks. Her doctor was responsible for
monitoring her medical condition and weight gain. Family
sessions could therefore concentrate on family process in
dealing with Tanya's eating patterns. Stage 2: Nuclear family
issues Locating the presenting problem in the broader family
context revealed that the family was in the process of
negotiating some significant changes. Around the onset of
Tanya's pronounced weight loss, her older sister, Roslyn, had
moved away from home to begin medical studies at university.
Roslyn had previously been considered the rebel of the family
but was now clearly labelled as the 'golden girl' who would
make them all proud with her academic success. Family roles
and the theme of economic success were identified. Mr. Barret
had recently received a promotion which necessitated moving to
another city. Mrs. Barret had left her job as a nurse and had not
been working for the nine months following the family move.
Gender themes were becoming evident as Tanya spoke of how
personally she was identifying with her mother's loss of
professional role. While there were numerous family changes
that could inform hypotheses about her symptoms, my primary
focus was the operation of family triangles in dealing with
anxiety. Tanya expressed her triangled role in her parents'
issues as she spoke about their emotional life. She described the
stress of her father's work and reported passionately on her
mother's loss of status since giving up her nursing job. She
perceived her mother's life as empty, and she herself felt
similarly empty and directionless. The fusion in nuclear family
relationships was striking, with family members reacting to
either comfort or criticise each other. During the sessions, the
six year old daughter Liz passed tissues to those who looked
upset, or distracted by using puppets from the play box to bring
some humour into the room. I reflected to the family just how
closely 'wired' to each other's feelings they all were and how
readily they seemed to switch from their own issues to focus on
the emotional intensity of others. Questions were asked that
encouraged an awareness of this fusion, for example: [To
Tanya]. 'I know you've become an expert at being the emotional
voice for your parents but what would you say, just this once, if
you could speak for your own needs?' [To Mr. Barret]. 'Do you
have any sense of when you first started to take Tanya's
symptoms so personally - as if they were directed at hurting
you?' Mrs. Barret spoke of how their eldest daughter Roslyn had
complained of feeling suffocated by being at home and how
they had hardly seen her during her last few years of high
school. When Roslyn was at home her relationship with her
father had been highly conflictual. Now that she was at medical
school Mr. Barret spoke of how proud they all were of her. He
had tears in his eyes as he spoke of how Roslyn now had the
chance to achieve what he had not been able to. Each of the
children, to varying degrees, appeared to be triangled into their
parents' emotional issues. While Roslyn and Liz were currently
occupying symptom-free roles in diffusing parental anxiety,
Tanya seemed stuck in a symptom-focused dance with her
parents' neediness. Nuclear family triangles were tracked
around family members' responses to Tanya's eating patterns. A
eating behaviour closely, with Tanya becoming increasingly
purging, with the latter responding in tears, saying that nobody
i
hearing a daily account of his wife's suspicions, would begin
yelling at Tanya, saying what a disappointment she was to him.
closer in support.
threatened to increase distance and tension in the marriage, Mrs.
Barret would suggest ways to her husband and daughter about
with the family but would set up a joint outing for herself and
her Dad. Stage 3: Expanding the view to previous generations
While seeking to draw out the repetitive patterns in the current
family experience, I also look for ways to connect present
tensions to multigenerational themes. Exploration of both
parents' family of origin revealed potent themes that fed into the
intense struggle of the nuclear family triangle between Tanya,
her father and her mother. While ever Mr Barret and Mrs Barret
could worry about her, they did not have to address the
relationship disappointments that they had hoped would be
mended through their marriage. A key task of ongoing therapy
was to help the parents separate these unresolved family of
origin issues from their interactions with Tanya. Both parents
had been in the same middle child position as Tanya, which had
intensified their identification with her. Reflecting on their own
adolescence and their relationship with their parents helped Mr
Barret and Mrs Barret to assume a more objective stance
towards their daughter. Mrs Barret was able to stop herself
encouraging Tanya to look after her father following an
argument. Mrs Barret was also able to see how her striving to
create a different relationship from the distant and critical one
she had with her own mother was getting in the way of her
being able to set any limits with Tanya. Mr Barret was able to
start viewing Tanya as a separate person from himself or his
father and was thus more able to notice her unique strengths.
This shift was a particularly painful journey for Mr Barret, who
recounted his memories of his alcoholic father, who had died in
an emaciated state after choking on his own vomit. The parallel
to Tanya's symptoms helped to make sense of his intense
reactivity in their relationship. Tanya was able to hear that her
parents' reactions were more about where they had come from
than about what kind of a daughter she was. During therapy she
struggled to cope with the shift in family patterns. She was
excluded from the triangle with her parents where she had
occupied a pivotal role in helping to regulate their closeness. To
assist with this shift, some sessions were held with her and her
older sister Roslyn, so that the sisters could establish a
connection as young adults sharing similar life cycle tasks,
rather than being their parents' caretakers. A couple of months
down the track, she mentioned that she had been writing to
Roslyn and that they were sharing information about boyfriends
that their parents were not privy to. After about five months of
therapy, her weight had increased to a level which put her out of
the medical risk category. At this time Mr Barret and Mrs
Barret felt that they wanted to focus on some of their own
family of origin issues as a couple and individually. Tanya was
busy rehearsing for a school play in which she had the female
lead, so she asked if she could take a break from family sessions
and let her parents come on their own. Conclusion At a time
when family therapy is rediscovering its psychoanalytic roots
(Quadrio, 1986; Luepnitz, 1988; Flaskas, 1993; James, 1992), it
is important to be clear about the distinctions between
psychodynamic and Bowenian approaches. While both models
are comprehensive in accounting for many aspects of human
experience, the essential difference is that Bowen's focus is not
the intrapsychic experience of the individual. It focuses on the
structure and workings of the system so that the individual can
forge a different systemic role. While in psychoanalysis, self
understanding comes through the vehicle of the therapist / client
relationship, in Bowenian therapy it comes from the between-
session, planned action of the 'self in the system'. In giving an
overview of Bowen's model, this paper risks oversimplifying its
in-depth formulation of family process. My aim has been to
summarise Bowen's core concepts and to give a flavour of how
these influence the focus of therapy. One needs to be mindful
however, of potential pitfalls when using a family of origin
model. Bowen's focus on the distant to solve the proximate may
take families on therapeutic paths which go beyond their request
for the shortest possible road to symptom relief. Without recent
significant socio-political additions, Bowen's theory
decontextualises relationship patterns that are powerfully
informed by gender, ethnicity and class. Those who adhere to a
Bowenian framework speak of the appeal of its attention to
complex family patterns in both vertical and horizontal time.
Perhaps what is most distinctive about Bowen's theory amongst
systemic therapies, is that it directs therapists to consider their
own roles in their families of origin so that they can personally
experience the theory in order to appreciate its clinical
application. References Bograd, M., 1987. Enmeshment: Fusion
or Relatedness: A Conceptual Analysis, Journal of
Psychotherapy and the Family, 3, 4: 65-80. Bowen, M., 1966.
The Use of Family Theory in Clinical Practice, Comprehensive
Psychiatry, 7: 345-374. In M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen,
M., 1971. Family Therapy and Family Group Therapy. In H.
Kaplan and B. Sadok, (Eds), Comprehensive Group
Psychotherapy, Baltimore, Williams and Wilkins: 384-421.
Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen, M., 1971a.
Principles and Techniques of Multiple Family Therapy. In J.
Bradt and C. Moynihan, (Eds), Systems Theory, [no publisher
stated] Washington, DC. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below).
Bowen, M., 1972. On the Differentiation of Self. First published
anonymously in J. Framo, (Ed.), Family Interaction: A Dialogue
Between Family Researchers and Family Therapists, NY,
Springer: 111-173. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below).
Bowen, M., 1975. Family Therapy After Twenty Years. In S.
Arieti, (Ed.), American Handbook of Psychiatry, Vol 5, 2nd
edn, NY, Basic Books. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below).
Bowen, M., 1978. Family Therapy in Clinical Practice, NY and
London, Jason Aronson. Carter, E., 1991, My Reluctant
Ancestor, The Family Therapy Networker, March-April: 40-41.
Carter, E., 1992. Techniques to Help the Therapist to Include
the Socio-Cultural Context in Couples Therapy. Unpublished
handout, Family Institute of Westchester. Carter, E. and
McGoldrick, M., (Eds), 1980. The Family Life Cycle: A
Framework for Family Therapy, NY, Gardner Press. Carter, E.
and McGoldrick, M., (Eds), 1988. The Changing Family Life
Cycle, 2nd edn. NY, Gardner Press. Carter, E. and McGoldrick
M., 1991. 'Foreword'. In F. Herz Brown, (Ed.), Reweaving the
Family Tapestry, NY and London, Norton. Carter, E. (and
Peters, J.), 1996. Love, Honour and Negotiate, NY, Pocket
Books. Carter, E., 1988, with Walters, M., Papp, P., and
Silverstein, O. The Invisible Web, Gender Patterns in Family
Relationships, NY, Guilford. Flaskas, C., 1993. On the Project
of Using Psychoanalytic Ideas in Systemic Therapy: A
Discussion Paper, ANZJFT 14, 1: 9-15. Goodnow, K. K. and
Lim, M. G., 1997. Bowenian Theory in Application: A Case
Study, Journal of Family Psychotherapy, 8, 1: 33-41. Guerin, P.,
1976. Family Therapy, Theory and Practice, NY, Gardner Press.
Guerin, P., Fay, L., Burden, S. and Kautto, J., 1987. The
Evaluation and Treatment of Marital Conflict, NY, Basic Books.
Guerin, P., Fogarty, T., Fay, L. and Kautto, J., 1996. Working
with Relationship Triangles, NY, London, Guilford. Hare-
Mustin, R., 1978. A Feminist Approach to Family Therapy,
Family Process 17: 181-194. Herz Brown, F., 1991. The Model.
In F. Herz Brown, (Ed.), Reweaving the Family Tapestry, NY,
Norton. James, K., 1989. When Twos Are Really Threes: The
Triangular Dance in Couple Conflict, ANZJFT, 10, 3: 179- 189.
James, K., 1992. Why Feminists Have Become Interested in
Psychoanalysis, Journal of Feminist Family Therapy, 4, 3-4.
Kerr, M., and Bowen, M., 1988. Family Evaluation: An
Approach Based on Bowen Theory, NY, Norton. Kerr, M., 1991.
Living The Theory, The Family Therapy Networker, March-
April: 39-40. Lederer, G. S., and Lewis, J., 1991. The
Transition to Couplehood. In F. Herz Brown, (Ed.), Reweaving
the Family Tapestry, NY, Norton. Lerner, H., 1983. Female
Dependency in Context: Some Theoretical and Technical
Considerations, American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 53: 697-
705. Lerner, H., 1988. The Dance of Anger, NY, Harper & Row.
Lerner, H., 1990. The Dance of Intimacy, NY, Harper & Row.
Lerner, H., 1993. The Dance of Deception, NY, Harper & Row.
Luepnitz, D., 1988. The Family Interpreted: Psychoanalysis,
Feminism and Family Therapy, NY, Basic Books. McGoldrick,
M., Pearce, J. and Giordano J., (Eds), 1982. Ethnicity and
Family Therapy, NY, Guilford. McGoldrick, M. and Gerson, R.,
1985. Genograms in Family Assessment, NY, Norton.
McGoldrick, M., Anderson, C. and Walsh, F., (Eds), 1988.
Women in Families, NY, Norton. McGoldrick, M. and Walsh, F.
(Eds), 1991. Living Beyond Loss, NY, Norton. McGoldrick, M.,
1995. You Can Go Home Again, NY, Norton. Minuchin, S.,
1974. Families & Family Therapy, Cambridge, MA, Harvard
University Press. Quadrio, C., 1986. Analysis and System: A
Marriage, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry,
18: 184- 187. Schnarch, D., 1991. Constructing the Sexual
Crucible, NY, Norton. Schnarch, D., 1997. Passionate Marriage,
NY, Norton. Toman,W., 1961. Family Constellation, NY,
Springer. 3rd rev. edn, 1976. Wylie, M. Sykes., 1991. Family
Therapy's Neglected Prophet, The Family Therapy Networker,
March-April: 25- 37. Young, P., 1991. Families with
Adolescents. In F. Herz Brown, Reweaving The Family
Tapestry, NY, Norton. Acknowledgment The author wishes to
thank Kerrie James for ideas helpful in the writing of this
article. Coming to grips with family systems theory in a
collaborative, learning environment.
[email protected]
http://www.thefsi.com.

Contenu connexe

Similaire à Murray Bowen is one of the most respected family theorists in th.docx

Exploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docx
Exploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docxExploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docx
Exploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docx
mecklenburgstrelitzh
 
Active Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docx
Active Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docxActive Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docx
Active Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docx
daniahendric
 
The Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docx
The Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docxThe Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docx
The Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docx
rtodd33
 
The Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docx
The Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docxThe Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docx
The Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docx
arnoldmeredith47041
 
© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx
© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx
© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx
harrisonhoward80223
 
3 plots for trailer 4018
3 plots for trailer 40183 plots for trailer 4018
3 plots for trailer 4018
haverstockmedia
 
Sue's Story - April 5, 1998
Sue's Story - April 5, 1998Sue's Story - April 5, 1998
Sue's Story - April 5, 1998
Maria Lameiras
 
Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docx
Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docxSara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docx
Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docx
todd331
 
Juan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docx
Juan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docxJuan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docx
Juan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docx
tawnyataylor528
 
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docxThe Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docx
gabrielaj9
 
The Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docx
The Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docxThe Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docx
The Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docx
arnoldmeredith47041
 
HIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric The g.docx
HIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric  The g.docxHIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric  The g.docx
HIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric The g.docx
pooleavelina
 
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docxThe Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docx
oreo10
 
To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis
To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis
To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis
maryettamckinnel
 
BPSS Clinical Case Presentation
BPSS Clinical Case PresentationBPSS Clinical Case Presentation
BPSS Clinical Case Presentation
Shelby L. Simpson
 

Similaire à Murray Bowen is one of the most respected family theorists in th.docx (20)

Exploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docx
Exploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docxExploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docx
Exploring the reasons for wanting to be in social work and exami.docx
 
Active Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docx
Active Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docxActive Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docx
Active Imagination A form of reflection through which people act.docx
 
Helen keller.4
Helen keller.4Helen keller.4
Helen keller.4
 
The Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docx
The Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docxThe Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docx
The Hernandez FamilyJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernande.docx
 
Ecd 300
Ecd 300 Ecd 300
Ecd 300
 
The Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docx
The Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docxThe Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docx
The Case of LPresenting Problem Client presented in the emerge.docx
 
© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx
© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx
© 2013 Laureate Education, Inc. 1 Adolescence” Program .docx
 
Omkar mulje
Omkar muljeOmkar mulje
Omkar mulje
 
3 plots for trailer 4018
3 plots for trailer 40183 plots for trailer 4018
3 plots for trailer 4018
 
HELEN KELLER STORY OF MY LIFE SUMARY CHAPTER WISE
HELEN KELLER STORY OF MY LIFE SUMARY CHAPTER WISEHELEN KELLER STORY OF MY LIFE SUMARY CHAPTER WISE
HELEN KELLER STORY OF MY LIFE SUMARY CHAPTER WISE
 
Sue's Story - April 5, 1998
Sue's Story - April 5, 1998Sue's Story - April 5, 1998
Sue's Story - April 5, 1998
 
Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docx
Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docxSara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docx
Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female who lives in a .docx
 
Juan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docx
Juan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docxJuan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docx
Juan and ElenaJuan Hernandez (27) and Elena Hernandez (2.docx
 
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docxThe Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian fema.docx
 
The Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docx
The Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docxThe Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docx
The Parker FamilySara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female .docx
 
sprit
spritsprit
sprit
 
HIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric The g.docx
HIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric  The g.docxHIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric  The g.docx
HIM 500 Module Two Activity Guidelines and Rubric The g.docx
 
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docxThe Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docx
The Parker Family Sara is a 72-year-old widowed Caucasian female.docx
 
To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis
To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis
To prepare Use a differential diagnosis process and analysis
 
BPSS Clinical Case Presentation
BPSS Clinical Case PresentationBPSS Clinical Case Presentation
BPSS Clinical Case Presentation
 

Plus de ssuserf9c51d

Music has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docx
Music has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docxMusic has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docx
Music has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
MSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docx
MSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docxMSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docx
MSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Multimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docx
Multimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docxMultimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docx
Multimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Mrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docx
Mrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docxMrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docx
Mrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Murder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docx
Murder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docxMurder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docx
Murder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Multimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docx
Multimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docxMultimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docx
Multimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Multigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docx
Multigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docxMultigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docx
Multigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Multicultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docx
Multicultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docxMulticultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docx
Multicultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
MS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docx
MS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docxMS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docx
MS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 
Mrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docx
Mrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docxMrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docx
Mrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docx
ssuserf9c51d
 

Plus de ssuserf9c51d (20)

Muslims in the Golden Age is the theme for the research project. You.docx
Muslims in the Golden Age is the theme for the research project. You.docxMuslims in the Golden Age is the theme for the research project. You.docx
Muslims in the Golden Age is the theme for the research project. You.docx
 
Multiple Sources of MediaExamine the impact of multiple sour.docx
Multiple Sources of MediaExamine the impact of multiple sour.docxMultiple Sources of MediaExamine the impact of multiple sour.docx
Multiple Sources of MediaExamine the impact of multiple sour.docx
 
Multicultural Event WrittenPlease choose and research a cult.docx
Multicultural Event WrittenPlease choose and research a cult.docxMulticultural Event WrittenPlease choose and research a cult.docx
Multicultural Event WrittenPlease choose and research a cult.docx
 
Multi-Party NegotiationFor this Essay, you will explore the co.docx
Multi-Party NegotiationFor this Essay, you will explore the co.docxMulti-Party NegotiationFor this Essay, you will explore the co.docx
Multi-Party NegotiationFor this Essay, you will explore the co.docx
 
Music has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docx
Music has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docxMusic has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docx
Music has long been used by movements seeking social change.  In the.docx
 
MSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docx
MSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docxMSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docx
MSW Advanced Clinical Concentration -Student Learning AgreementW.docx
 
Multimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docx
Multimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docxMultimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docx
Multimedia Instructional MaterialsStaying current on technolog.docx
 
Mrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docx
Mrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docxMrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docx
Mrs. Thomas is a 54, year old African American widow, mother and gra.docx
 
Multiple Source Essay, Speculating about CausesProposing a Solution.docx
Multiple Source Essay, Speculating about CausesProposing a Solution.docxMultiple Source Essay, Speculating about CausesProposing a Solution.docx
Multiple Source Essay, Speculating about CausesProposing a Solution.docx
 
Multiyear Plans Please respond to the followingDo you.docx
Multiyear Plans Please respond to the followingDo you.docxMultiyear Plans Please respond to the followingDo you.docx
Multiyear Plans Please respond to the followingDo you.docx
 
Multinational Financial ManagementDetermine key reasons wh.docx
Multinational Financial ManagementDetermine key reasons wh.docxMultinational Financial ManagementDetermine key reasons wh.docx
Multinational Financial ManagementDetermine key reasons wh.docx
 
Murder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docx
Murder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docxMurder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docx
Murder CasePreambleAn organization system administrator .docx
 
Multimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docx
Multimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docxMultimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docx
Multimodal Personal Narrative – Develop a multimodal document to bot.docx
 
Multigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docx
Multigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docxMultigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docx
Multigenre ProjectEN101O Fall 2019 Dr. WalterA Multigenre Pr.docx
 
Multimedia activity Business OrganizationVisit the Choose Your .docx
Multimedia activity Business OrganizationVisit the Choose Your .docxMultimedia activity Business OrganizationVisit the Choose Your .docx
Multimedia activity Business OrganizationVisit the Choose Your .docx
 
Multicultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docx
Multicultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docxMulticultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docx
Multicultural PerspectiveToday’s classrooms are diverse and .docx
 
Muhammad Ali, how did his refusal to go into the army affect his.docx
Muhammad Ali, how did his refusal to go into the army affect his.docxMuhammad Ali, how did his refusal to go into the army affect his.docx
Muhammad Ali, how did his refusal to go into the army affect his.docx
 
MS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docx
MS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docxMS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docx
MS 113 Some key concepts that you need to know to navigate th.docx
 
Much has been made of the new Web 2.0 phenomenon, including social n.docx
Much has been made of the new Web 2.0 phenomenon, including social n.docxMuch has been made of the new Web 2.0 phenomenon, including social n.docx
Much has been made of the new Web 2.0 phenomenon, including social n.docx
 
Mrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docx
Mrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docxMrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docx
Mrs. Dolan is a 46-year-old female who presented to the emergency de.docx
 

Dernier

1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
QucHHunhnh
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
kauryashika82
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
QucHHunhnh
 

Dernier (20)

Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdfWeb & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
 
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptxICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
 
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxUnit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
 
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin ClassesMixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
 
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionmicrowave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
 
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docxPython Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
 
Sociology 101 Demonstration of Learning Exhibit
Sociology 101 Demonstration of Learning ExhibitSociology 101 Demonstration of Learning Exhibit
Sociology 101 Demonstration of Learning Exhibit
 
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
 
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxUnit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
 
This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
 
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptxINDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
 
ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701
ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701
ComPTIA Overview | Comptia Security+ Book SY0-701
 
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
 
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
 
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdfMicro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 

Murray Bowen is one of the most respected family theorists in th.docx

  • 1. Murray Bowen is one of the most respected family theorists in the field of family therapy. Bowen views the family unit as complex and believes it is important to understand the interactions among the members in order to solve problems. Satir and Minuchin also advanced family therapy with their concepts and models. As a clinical social worker, using these models (along with having an ecological perspective) can be very effective in helping clients. For this Discussion, review the “Petrakis Family” case history and video session. By Day 4 Post (using two concepts of Bowen’s family theory) a discussion and analysis of the events that occurred after Alec moved in with his grandmother up until Helen went to the hospital. If you used the concepts of structural family therapy, how would your analysis of the situation be different? Which family theory did you find to be most helpful in your analysis? Finally, indicate whether Satir’s or Minuchin’s model is the more strength-based model. Why? The Petrakis Family Helen Petrakis is a 52-year-old heterosexual married female of Greek descent who says that she feels overwhelmed and “blue.” She came to our agency at the suggestion of a close friend who thought Helen would benefit from having a person who could listen. Although she is uncomfortable talking about her life with a stranger, Helen said that she decided to come for therapy because she worries about burdening friends with her troubles. Helen and I have met four times, twice per month, for individual therapy in 50-minute
  • 2. sessions. Helen consistently appears well-groomed. She speaks clearly and in moderate tones and seems to have linear thought progression; her memory seems intact. She claims no history of drug or alcohol abuse, and she does not identify a history of trauma. Helen says that other than chronic back pain from an old injury, which she manages with acetaminophen as needed, she is in good health. Helen has worked full time at a hospital in the billing department since graduating from high school. Her husband, John (60), works full time managing a grocery store and earns the larger portion of the family income. She and John live with their three adult children in a 4-bedroom house. Helen voices a great deal of pride in the children. Alec, 27, is currently unemployed, which Helen attributes to the poor economy. Dmitra, 23, whom Helen describes as smart, beautiful, and hardworking, works as a sales consultant for a local department store. Athina, 18, is an honors student at a local college and earns spending money as a hostess in a family friend’s restaurant; Helen describes her as adorable and reliable. In our first session, I explained to Helen that I was an advanced year intern completing my second field placement at the agency. I told her I worked closely with my field supervisor to provide the best care possible. She said that was fine, congratulated me on advancing my career, and then began talking. I listened for the reasons Helen came to speak with me. I asked Helen about her community, which, she explained, centered on the activities of the Greek Orthodox Church. She and John were married in that church and attend services weekly. She expects that her children will also eventually wed there. Her children, she explained, are religious but do not regularly go to church because they are very busy. She believes that the children are too busy to be expected to help around the house. Helen shops, cooks, and cleans for the family, and John sees to yard care and maintains the family’s cars. When I asked whether the children contributed to the finances of the home, Helen looked shocked and said that John would find it deeply insulting to take money from his children. As Helen described her life, I surmised that
  • 3. the Petrakis family holds strong family bonds within a large and supportive community. Helen is responsible for the care of John’s 81-year-old widowed mother, Magda, who lives in an apartment 30 minutes away. Until recently, Magda was self- sufficient, coming for weekly family dinners and driving herself shopping and to church. But 6 months ago, she fell and broke her hip and was also recently diagnosed with early signs of dementia. Through their church, Helen and John hired a reliable and trusted woman to check in on Magda a couple of days each week. Helen goes to see Magda on the other days, sometimes twice in one day, depending on Magda’s needs. She buys her food, cleans her home, pays her bills, and keeps track of her medications. Helen says she would like to have the helper come in more often, but she cannot afford it. The money to pay for help is coming out of the couple’s vacations savings. Caring for Magda makes Helen feel as if she is failing as a wife and mother because she no longer has time to spend with her husband and children. Helen sounded angry as she described the amount of time she gave toward Magda’s care. She has stopped going shopping and out to eat with friends because she can no longer find the time. Lately, John has expressed displeasure with meals at home, as Helen has been cooking less often and brings home takeout. She sounded defeated when she described an incident in which her son, Alec, expressed disappointment in her because she could not provide him with clean laundry. When she cried in response, he offered to help care for his grandmother. Alec proposed moving in with Magda. Helen wondered if asking Alec to stay with his grandmother might be good for all of them. John and Alec had been arguing lately, and Alec and his grandmother had always been very fond of each other. Helen thought she could offer Alec the money she gave Magda’s helper. I responded that I thought Helen and Alec were using creative problem solving and utilizing their resources well in crafting a plan. I said that Helen seemed to find good solutions within her family and culture. Helen appeared concerned as I said this, and I surmised that she was reluctant to
  • 4. impose on her son because she and her husband 20 SESSIONS: CASE HISTORIES • THE PETRAKIS FAMILY seemed to value providing for their children’s needs rather than expecting them to contribute resources. Helen ended the session agreeing to consider the solution we discussed to ease the stress of caring for Magda. The Petrakis Family Magda Petrakis: mother of John Petrakis, 81 John Petrakis: father, 60 Helen Petrakis: mother, 52 Alec Petrakis: son, 27 Dmitra Petrakis: daughter, 23 Athina Petrakis: daughter, 18 In our second session, Helen said that her son again mentioned that he saw how overwhelmed she was and wanted to help care for Magda. While Helen was not sure this was the best idea, she saw how it might be helpful for a short time. Nonetheless, her instincts were still telling her that this could be a bad plan. Helen worried about changing the arrangements as they were and seemed reluctant to step away from her integral role in Magda’s care, despite the pain it was causing her. In this session, I helped Helen begin to explore her feelings and assumptions about her role as a caretaker in the family. Helen did not seem able to identify her expectations of herself as a caretaker. She did, however, resolve her ambivalence about Alec’s offer to care for Magda. By the end of the session, Helen agreed to have Alec live with his grandmother. In our third session, Helen briskly walked into the room and announced that Alec had moved in with Magda and it was a disaster. Since the move, Helen had had to be at the apartment at least once daily to intervene with emergencies. Magda called Helen at work the day after Alec moved in to ask Helen to pick up a refill of her medications at the pharmacy. Helen asked to speak to Alec, and Magda said he had gone out with two friends the night before and had not come home yet. Helen left work immediately and drove to Magda’s home. Helen angrily told me that she assumed that Magda misplaced the medications, but then she began to cry and said that the medications were not misplaced, they were really gone. When she searched the apartment, Helen noticed that the cash box was empty and that Magda’s checkbook was missing two checks.
  • 5. Helen determined that Magda was robbed, but because she did not want to frighten her, she decided not to report the crime. Instead, Helen phoned the pharmacy and explained that her mother-in-law, suffering from dementia, had accidently destroyed her medication and would need refills. She called Magda’s bank and learned that the checks had been cashed. Helen cooked lunch for her motherin-law and ate it with her. When a tired and disheveled Alec arrived back in the apartment, Helen quietly told her son about the robbery and reinforced the importance of remaining in the building with Magda at night. Helen said that the events in Magda’s apartment were repeated 2 days later. By this time in the session Helen was furious. With her face red with rage and her hands shaking, she told me that all this was my fault for suggesting that Alec’s presence in the apartment would benefit the family. Jewelry from Greece, which had been in the family for generations, was now gone. Alec would never be in this trouble if I had not told Helen he should be permitted to live with his grandmother. Helen said she should know better than to talk to a stranger about private matters. Helen cried, and as I sat and listened to her sobs, I was not sure whether to let her cry, give her a tissue, or interrupt her. As the session was nearing the end, Helen quickly told me that Alec has struggled with maintaining sobriety since he was a teen. He is currently on 2 years’ probation for possession and had recently completed a rehabilitation program. Helen said she now realized Alec was stealing from his grandmother to support his drug habit. She could not possibly tell her husband because he would hurt and humiliate Alec, and she would not consider telling the police. Helen’s solution was to remove the valuables and medications from the apartment and to visit twice a day to bring supplies and medicine and check on Alec and Magda. After this session, it was unclear how to proceed with Helen. I asked my field instructor for help. I explained that I had offered support for a possible solution to Helen’s difficulties and stress. In rereading the progress notes in Helen’s chart, I realized I had misinterpreted Helen’s reluctance to ask Alec to move in with
  • 6. his grandmother. I felt terrible about pushing Helen into acting outside of her own instincts. My field instructor reminded me that I had not forced Helen to act as she had and that no one was responsible for the actions of another person. She told me that beginning social workers do make mistakes and that my errors were part of a learning process and were not irreparable. I was reminded that advising Helen, or any client, is ill-advised. My field instructor expressed concern about my ethical and legal obligations to protect Magda. She suggested that I call the county office on aging and adult services to research my duty to report, and to speak to the agency director about my ethical and legal obligations in this case. In our fourth session, Helen apologized for missing a previous appointment with me. She said she awoke the morning of the appointment with tightness in her chest and a feeling that her heart was racing. John drove Helen to the emergency room at the hospital in which she works. By the time Helen got to the hospital, she could not 21 SESSIONS: CASE HISTORIES • THE PETRAKIS FAMILY catch her breath and thought she might pass out. The hospital ran tests but found no conclusive organic reason to explain Helen’s symptoms. I asked Helen how she felt now. She said that since her visit to the hospital, she continues to experience shortness of breath, usually in the morning when she is getting ready to begin her day. She said she has trouble staying asleep, waking two to four times each night, and she feels tired during the day. Working is hard because she is more forgetful than she has ever been. Her back is giving her trouble, too. Helen said that she feels like her body is one big tired knot. I suggested that her symptoms could indicate anxiety and she might want to consider seeing a psychiatrist for an evaluation. I told Helen it would make sense, given the pressures in her life, that she felt anxiety. I said that she and I could develop a treatment plan to help her address the anxiety. Helen’s therapy goals include removing Alec from Magda’s apartment and speaking to John about a safe and supported living arrangement for Magda.
  • 7. Bowen Family Systems Theory and Practice: Illustration and Critique By Jenny Brown This paper will give an overview of Murray Bowen’s theory of family systems. It will describe the model’s development and outline its core clinical components. The practice of therapy will be described as well as recent developments within the model. Some key criticisms will be raised, followed by a case example which highlights the therapeutic focus of Bowen’s approach. This is the author’s version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Australian Academic Press for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy (ANZJFT) Vol.20 No.2 1999 pp 94-103). Introduction Murray Bowen's family systems theory (shortened to 'Bowen theory' from 1974) was one of the first comprehensive theories of family systems functioning (Bowen, 1966, 1978, Kerr and Bowen, 1988). While it has received sporadic attention in Australia and New Zealand, it continues to be a central influence in the practice of family therapy in North America. It is possible that some local family therapists have been influenced by many of Bowen's ideas without the connection being articulated. For example, the writing of Guerin (1976, 1987), Carter and McGoldrick (1980, 1988), Lerner (1986, 1988, 1990, 1993) and Schnarch (1991, 1997) all have Bowenian Theory at the heart of their conceptualisations. There is a pervasive view amongst many proponents of Bowen's work that his theory needs to be experienced rather than taught (Kerr, 1991). While this may be applicable if one can be immersed in the milieu of a Bowenian training institute, such an option, to my knowledge, is not available in this country. Bowen's own writings have also been charged with being tedious and difficult to read (Carter, 1991). Hence it seems pertinent to present this influential theory in an accessible format. Development Of The Model Murray Bowen was born in 1913 in Tennessee and died
  • 8. in 1990. He trained as a psychiatrist and originally practised within the psychoanalytic model. At the Menninger Clinic in the late 1940s, he had started to involve mothers in the investigation and treatment of schizophrenic patients. His devotion to his own psychoanalytic training was set aside after his move to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in 1954, as he began to shift from an individual focus to an appreciation of the dimensions of families as systems. At the NIMH, Bowen began to include more family members in his research and psychotherapy with schizophrenic patients. In 1959 he moved to Georgetown University and established the Georgetown Family Centre (where he was director until his death). It was here that his developing theory was extended to less severe emotional problems. Between 1959 and 1962 he undertook detailed research into families across several generations. Rather than developing a theory about pathology, Bowen focused on what he saw as the common patterns of all 'human emotional systems'. With such a focus on the qualitative similarities of all families, Bowen was known to say frequently, 'There is a little schizophrenia in all of us' (Kerr and Bowen, 1988). In 1966, Bowen published the first 'orderly presentation' of his developing ideas (Bowen, 1978: xiii). Around the same time he used his concepts to guide his intervention in a minor emotional crisis in his own extended family, an intervention which he describes as a spectacular breakthrough for him in theory and practice (Bowen, 1972 in Bowen, 1978). In 1967, he surprised a national family therapy conference by talking about his own family experience, rather than presenting the anticipated formal paper. Bowen proceeded to encourage students to work on triangles and intergenerational patterns in their own families of origin rather than undertaking individual psychotherapy. From this generation of trainees have come the current leaders of Bowenian Therapy, such as Michael Kerr at the Georgetown Family Center, Philip Guerin at the Center for Family Learning, Betty Carter at the Family Institute of Westchester, and Monica McGoldrick at the [Multicultural]
  • 9. Family Institute of New Jersey. While the core concepts of Bowen's theory have changed little over two decades, there have been significant expansions: the focus on life cycle stages (Carter and McGoldrick, 1980, 1988) and the incorporation of a feminist lens (Carter, Walters, Papp, Silverstein, 1988; Lerner, 1983; Bograd, 1987). The Theory Bowen's focus was on patterns that develop in families in order to defuse anxiety. A key generator of anxiety in families is the perception of either too much closeness or too great a distance in a relationship. The degree of anxiety in any one family will be determined by the current levels of external stress and the sensitivities to particular themes that have been transmitted down the generations. If family members do not have the capacity to think through their responses to relationship dilemmas, but rather react anxiously to perceived emotional demands, a state of chronic anxiety or reactivity may be set in place. The main goal of Bowenian therapy is to reduce chronic anxiety by 1. facilitating awareness of how the emotional system functions; and 2. increasing levels of differentiation, where the focus is on making changes for the self rather than on trying to change others. Eight interlocking concepts make up Bowen's theory. This paper will give an overview of seven of these. The eighth attempts to link his theory to the evolution of society, and has little relevance to the practice of his therapy. [However, Wylie (1991) points out in her biographical piece following Bowen's death that this interest in evolutionary process distinguishes Bowen from other family therapy pioneers. Bowen viewed himself as a scientist, with the lofty aim of developing a theory that accounted for the entire range of human behaviour and its origins.] 1 - Emotional Fusion and Differentiation of Self 2 - Triangles 3 - Nuclear Family Emotional System 3a. Couple Conflict 3b. Symptoms in a Spouse 3c. Symptoms in a Child 4 - Family Projection Process 5 - Emotional Cutoff 6 - Multi- generational Transmission Process 7 - Sibling Positions 1 - Emotional Fusion and Differentiation of Self 'Fusion' or 'lack of differentiation' is where individual choices are set aside in the
  • 10. service of achieving harmony within the system. Fusion can be expressed either as: * a sense of intense responsibility for another's reactions, or * by emotional 'cutoff' from the tension within a relationship (Kerr and Bowen, 1988; Herz Brown, 1991). Bowen's research led him to suggest that varying degrees of fusion are discernible in all families. 'Differentiation', by contrast, is described as the capacity of the individual to function autonomously by making self directed choices, while remaining emotionally connected to the intensity of a significant relationship system (Kerr and Bowen, 1988). Bowen's notion of fusion has a different focus to Minuchin's concept of enmeshment, which is based on a lack of boundary between sub-systems (Minuchin, 1974). The structural terms 'enmeshment' and 'disengagement' are in fact the twin polarities of Bowen's 'fusion'. Fusion describes each person's reactions within a relationship, rather than the overall structure of family relationships. Hence, anxiously cutting off the relationship is as much a sign of fusion as intense submissiveness. A person in a fused relationship reacts immediately (as if with a reflex, knee jerk response) to the perceived demands of another person, without being able to think through the choices or talk over relationship matters directly with the other person. Energy is invested in taking things personally (ensuring the emotional comfort of another), or in distancing oneself (ensuring one's own). The greater a family's tendency to fuse, the less flexibility it will have in adapting to stress. Bowen developed the idea of a 'differentiation of self scale' to assist in teaching this concept. He points out that this was not designed as an actual instrument for assigning people to particular levels (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 97-98). Bowen maintains that the speculative nature of estimating a level of differentiation is compounded by factors such as stress levels, individual differences in reactivity to different stressors, and the degree of contact individuals have with their extended family. At one end of the scale, hypothetical 'complete differentiation' is said to exist in a person who has resolved their emotional attachment to their family (ie. shifted
  • 11. out of their roles in relationship triangles) and can therefore function as an individual within the family group. Bowen did acknowledge that this was a lifelong process and that 'total' differentiation is not possible to attain. 2 - Triangles Bowen described triangles as the smallest stable relationship unit (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 135). The process of triangling is central to his theory. (Some people use the term 'triangulation', deriving from Minuchin (1974: 102), but Bowen always spoke of 'triangling'.) Triangling is said to occur when the inevitable anxiety in a dyad is relieved by involving a vulnerable third party who either takes sides or provides a detour for the anxiety (Lerner, 1988; James, 1989; Guerin, Fogarty, Fay and Kautto, 1996). An example of this pattern would be when Person A in a marriage begins feeling uncomfortable with too much closeness to Person B. S/he may begin withdrawing, perhaps to another activity such as work (the third point of the triangle). Person B then pursues Person A, which results in increased withdrawal to the initial triangled-in person or activity. Person B then feels neglected and seeks out an ally who will sympathise with his/her sense of exclusion. This in turn leads to Person A feeling like the odd one out and moving anxiously closer to Person B. Under stress, the triangling process feeds on itself and interlocking triangles are formed throughout the system. This can spill over into the wider community, when family members find allies, or enemies to unite against, such as doctors, teachers and therapists. Under calm conditions it is difficult to identify triangles but they emerge clearly under stress. Triangles are linked closely with Bowen's concept of differentiation, in that the greater the degree of fusion in a relationship, the more heightened is the pull to preserve emotional stability by forming a triangle. Bowen did not suggest that the process of triangling was necessarily dysfunctional, but the concept is a useful way of grasping the notion that the original tension gets acted out elsewhere. Triangling can become problematic when a third party's involvement distracts the members of a dyad from resolving
  • 12. their relationship impasse. If a third party is drawn in, the focus shifts to criticising or worrying about the new outsider, which in turn prevents the original complainants from resolving their tension. According to Bowen, triangles tend to repeat themselves across generations. When one member of a relationship triangle departs or dies, another person can be drawn into the same role (eg. 'villain', 'rescuer', 'victim', 'black sheep', 'martyr'). For example, in my own family of origin I found myself moving into the role of peacemaker after the death of my mother, who had mediated the tension between my father and brother. This ongoing triangle served to detour the anxiety that had been played out between fathers and sons in the family over the generations. 3 - Nuclear Family Emotional System In positing the 'nuclear family emotional system', Bowen focuses on the impact of 'undifferentiation' on the emotional functioning of a single generation family. He asserts that relationship fusion, which leads to triangling, is the fuel for symptom formation which is manifested in one of three categories. These are: a. couple conflict; b. illness in a spouse; c. projection of a problem onto one or more children. Each of these is expanded below. 3A. COUPLE CONFLICT The single generation unit usually starts with a dyad - a couple who, according to Bowen, will be at approximately equal levels of differentiation (ie. both have the same degree of need to be validated through the relationship). Bowen believed that permission to disagree is one of the most important contracts between individuals in an intimate relationship (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 188). In a fused relationship, partners interpret the emotional state of the other as their responsibility, and the other's stated disagreement as a personal affront to them. A typical pattern in such emotionally intense relationships is a cycle of closeness followed by conflict to create distance, which in turn is followed by the couple making up and resuming the intense closeness. This pattern is a 'conflictual cocoon' (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 192), where anxiety is bound within the conflict cycle without spilling over to involve children. Bowen suggested the following three ways
  • 13. in which couple conflict can be functional for a fused relationship, in which 'each person is attempting to become more whole through the other' (Lederer and Lewis, 1991). 1. Conflict can provide a strong sense of emotional contact with the important other. 2. Conflict can justify people's maintaining a comfortable distance from each other without feeling guilty about it. 3. Conflict can allow one person to project anxieties they have about themselves onto the other, thereby preserving their positive view of self (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 192). 3B. SYMPTOMS IN A SPOUSE In a fused relationship, where each partner looks to the other's qualities to fit his / her learned manner of relating to significant others, a pattern of reciprocity can be set in motion that pushes each spouse's role to opposite extremes. Drawing from his analytic background, Bowen described this fusion as 'the reciprocal side of each spouse's transference' (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 170). For example, what may start as an overly responsible spouse feeling compatible with a more dependent partner, can escalate to an increasingly controlling spouse with the other giving up any sense of contributing to the relationship. Both are equally undifferentiated in that they are defining themselves according to the reactions of the other; however the spouse who makes the most adjustments in the self in order to preserve relationship harmony is said by Bowen to be prone to developing symptoms. The person who gets polarised in the under functioning position is most vulnerable to symptoms of helplessness such as depression, substance abuse and chronic pain. The over functioning person might also be the one to develop symptoms, as s/he becomes overburdened by attempts to make things 'right' for others. 3C. SYMPTOMS IN A CHILD The third symptom of fusion in a family is when a child develops behavioural or emotional problems. This comes under Bowen's fourth theoretical concept, the Family Projection Process. 4 - Family Projection Process In the previous two categories the couple relationship is the focus of anxiety without it significantly impacting on the functioning of the next generation. By
  • 14. contrast, the family projection process describes how children develop symptoms when they get caught up in the previous generation's anxiety about relationships. The child with the least emotional separation from his/her parents is said to be the most vulnerable to developing symptoms. Bowen describes this as occurring when a child responds anxiously to the tension in the parents' relationship, which in turn is mistaken for a problem in the child. A detouring triangle is thus set in motion, as attention and protectiveness are shifted to the child. Within this cycle of reciprocal anxiety, a child becomes more demanding or more impaired. An example would be when an illness in a child distracts one parent from the pursuit of closeness in the marriage. As tension in the marriage is relieved, both spouses become invested in treating their child's condition, which may in turn become chronic or psychosomatic. As in all of Bowen's constructs, 'intergenerational projection' is said to occur in all families in varying degrees. Many intergenerational influences may determine which child becomes the focus of family anxiety and at what stage of the life cycle this occurs. The impact of crises and their timing also influences the vulnerability of certain children. Bowen viewed traumatic events as significant in highlighting the family processes rather than as actually 'causing' them. 5 - Emotional Cutoff Bowen describes 'emotional cutoff' as the way people manage the intensity of fusion between the generations. A 'cutoff' can be achieved through physical distance or through forms of emotional withdrawal. Bowen distinguishes between 'breaking away' from the family and 'growing away' from the family. 'Growing away' is viewed as part of differentiation - adult family members follow independent goals while also recognising that they are part of their family system. A 'cutoff' is more like an escape; people 'decide' to be completely different to their family of origin. While immediate pressure might be relieved by cutoff, patterns of reactivity in intense relationships remain unchanged and versions of the past, or its mirror image, are repeated. Bowen proposes that: If one does
  • 15. not see himself as part of the system, his only options are either to get others to change or to withdraw. If one sees himself as part of the system, he has a new option: to stay in contact with others and change self (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 272-273). 'Cutoffs' are not always dramatic rifts. An example of a covert emotional cutoff would be one family member maintaining an anxious silence in the face of another's anger. The pull to restore harmony overwhelms the ability to stay in contact with the issue that has been raised. A central hypothesis of Bowen's theory is that the more people maintain emotional contact with the previous generation, the less reactive they will be in current relationships. Conversely, when there are emotional cutoffs, the current family group can experience intense emotional pressure without effective escape valves. This family tension is like 'walking on eggshells', as issues which remain unresolved from the cutoff are carefully avoided. Triangling provides a detour, as family members enlist the support of others for their own position in relation to the cutoff. 6 - Multi-generational Transmission Process This concept of Bowen's theory describes how patterns, themes and positions (roles) in a triangle are passed down from generation to generation through the projection from parent to child which was described earlier. The impact will be different for each child depending on the degree of triangling they have with their parents. Bowen's focus on at least three generations of a family when dealing with a presenting symptom is certainly a trademark of his theory. The attention to family patterns over time is not just an evaluative tool, but an intervention that helps family members get sufficient distance from their current struggle with symptoms to see how they might change their own part in the transmission of anxiety over the generations. As Monica McGoldrick (1995: 20) writes in applying Bowenian concepts: By learning about your family and its history and getting to know what made family members tick, how they related, and where they got stuck, you can consider your own role, not simply as victim or reactor to your experiences but as an active player in
  • 16. interactions that repeat themselves. 7 - Sibling Positions Employing Walter Toman's (1976) sibling profiles, Bowen considered that sibling position could provide useful information in understanding the roles individuals tend to take in relationships. For example, Toman's profiles describe eldest children as more likely to take on responsibility and leadership, with younger siblings more comfortable being dependent and allowing others to make decisions. Middle children are described as having more flexibility to shift between responsibility and dependence and 'only' children are seen as being responsible, and having greater access to the adult world. Bowen noted that these generalised traits are not universally applicable and that it is possible for a younger sibling to become the 'functional eldest'. Bowen was especially interested in which sibling position in a family is most vulnerable to triangling with parents. It may be that a parent identifies strongly with a child in the same sibling position as their own, or that a previous cross generational triangle (eg. an eldest child aligned with a grandparent against a parent) may be repeated. If one sibling in the previous generation suffered a serious illness or died, it is more likely that the child of the present generation in the same sibling position will be viewed as more vulnerable and therefore more likely to detour tensions from the parental dyad. Helping the client understand and think beyond the limitations of their own sibling position and role is a goal of Bowenian family of origin work. Clients are encouraged to consider how assumptions about relationships are fuelled by their sibling role experience. As with other aspects of Bowen's theory, the impact of gender and ethnicity on sibling role is not considered. For example, there is no exploration of how a family's ethnicity influences which birth order position and which gender is more valued, or how the gender of any sibling position tends to influence whether the role is primarily relational (female), or task oriented (male). The Model In Clinical Practice Bowen's is not a technique focused model which incorporates specific descriptions of how to structure
  • 17. therapy sessions. The goal of therapy is to assist family members towards greater levels of differentiation, where there is less blaming, decreased reactivity and increased responsibility for self in the emotional system. Perhaps the most distinctive aspects of Bowen's therapy are his emphasis on the therapist's own family of origin work, the central role of the therapist in directing conversation and his minimal focus on children in the process of therapy. Bowen views therapy in three broad stages. 1. Stage one aims to reduce clients' anxiety about the symptom by encouraging them to learn how the symptom is part of their pattern of relating. 2. Stage two focuses adult clients on 'self' issues so as to increase their levels of differentiation. Clients are helped to resist the pull of what Bowen termed the 'togetherness force' in the family (Bowen, 1971 in Bowen, 1978: 218). 3. In the latter phases of therapy, adult clients are coached in differentiating themselves from their family of origin, the assumption being that gains in differentiation will automatically flow over into decreased anxiety and greater self-responsibility within the nuclear family system. Clinical Practice : The Role of the Therapist The role of the therapist is to connect with a family without becoming emotionally reactive. Emphasis is given to the therapist maintaining a 'differentiated' stance. This means that the therapist is not drawn into an over responsible / under responsible reciprocity in attempts to be helpful. A therapist position of calm and interested investigation is important, so that the family begins to learn about itself as an emotional system. Bowen instructs therapists to move out of a healing or helping position, where families passively wait for a cure, 'to getting the family into position to accept responsibility for its own change' (Bowen, 1971 in Bowen, 1978: 246). Bowen warns of the problems of therapists losing sight of their part in the system of interactions, where they may be inducted into a mediating role in a triangle with the family. Hence there is a high priority given to understanding and making changes within the therapist's own family of origin. In training, the emphasis is
  • 18. on the trainees' level of differentiation, and not on therapeutic technique. The therapist's resolution of family of origin issues is reflected in the: ...ability to be in emotional contact with a difficult, emotionally charged problem and not feel compelled to preach about what others should do, not rush in to fix the problem and not pretend to be detached by emotionally insulating oneself (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 108). Clinical Practice : Therapist Activity The therapist is active in directing the therapeutic conversation. Enactments are halted so as to prevent the escalation of clients' anxiety. Clients are asked to talk directly to the therapist so that other family members can "listen and 'really hear' without reacting emotionally, for the first time in their lives together" (Bowen, 1971 in Bowen, 1978: 248). Bowen himself would avoid couple interaction in the room and concentrate on interviewing one spouse in the presence of the other. Bowen clearly avoided asking for emotional responses, which he saw as less likely to lead to differentiation of self, preferring mostly to ask for 'thoughts', 'reactions' and 'impressions' (Bowen, 1971, in Bowen, 1978: 226). He called this activity 'externalizing the thinking of each client in the presence of the other' (Bowen, 1975 in Bowen, 1978: 314). Clinical Practice : Children in Bowen's Therapy A surprising feature of Bowen's family therapy is his tendency to minimise the involvement of children. While Bowen might include children in the beginning stage of therapy, he would soon dismiss them, focusing on the adults as the most influential members of a family system (Bowen, 1975 in Bowen, 1978: 298). Excluding a child from therapy responsibility is viewed as a detriangling manoeuvre. When parents cannot use the child as a 'triangle person' for issues between them, and the therapist resists taking the replacement role in the triangle, parents can begin differentiating their respective selves from one other. Clinical Practice : Family Evaluation The beginning sessions in Bowenian therapy focus on information gathering in order to form ideas about the family's emotional processes, which concurrently provides information to family members about the
  • 19. presenting problem in its systemic context. The presenting problem is tracked through the history of the nuclear family and into the extended family system. A multigenerational genogram is a useful tool for recording this information (McGoldrick and Gerson, 1985; Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 306-313). The therapist looks for clues about the emotional process of the particular family, including: patterns of regulating closeness and distance, how anxiety is dealt with in the system, what triangles get activated, the degree of adaptivity to changes and stressful events, and any signs of emotional 'cutoff'. Information collected is acknowledged to be extremely subjective, especially when extended family are discussed; but stories about past generations are viewed as useful clues to the roles people occupy in triangles and the tensions that remain unresolved from their families of origin. If for example, a member of the extended family is described as 'the rebel', the therapist explores what events gave rise to this label, who else has occupied this role across the generations and how triangles formed around family crises involving 'rebellion'. Calming family members' anxiety in the early stages of therapy might involve helping them to make connections between the development of symptoms and potent themes in a family's history. Another aim will be to loosen the central triangle that has formed around, and maintains, the presenting problem. Teaching clients about systems concepts as they operate in their own family is part of therapy at this stage. This does not mean attempting to convince people to do things differently but to encourage family members to see beyond their biases so that it is possible for them to consider each person's part in the family patterns. Clinical Practice : Questions that Encourage Differentiation The therapist asks questions that assume that the adult client can be responsible for his / her reactiveness to the other. An example would be, "How do you understand the way you seem to take your child's acting out so personally?" In response to such questions, family members are encouraged to take an 'I' position where they speak about how they view the
  • 20. problem, without attacking, or defending against, another family member (Bowen, 1971a in Bowen, 1978: 252; Goodnow and Lim, 1997). Clients are taught to make personal statements about their thoughts and feelings in order to facilitate a greater sense of responsibility in a relationship. For example, an accusatory statement such as, 'You are so selfish to cause this much worry for your parents!', is shifted to, 'I am really concerned that this might affect your school grades'. The parent is encouraged to 'own' their worries, rather than to project their anxieties through blaming statements. Developing such a 'self- focus' is said to be crucial in lowering anxiety and enabling 'person to person' relationships where each family member can think about the part they play in problematic interactions. Clinical Practice : Creating a Multigenerational Lens Bowen's multigenerational model goes beyond the view that the past influences the present, to the view that patterns of relating in the past continue in the present family system (Herz Brown, 1991). Hence the therapist uses questions to encourage clients to think about the connection between their present problem and the ways previous generations have dealt with similar relationship issues. For example, if the onset of a symptom followed a death in the family, the therapist asks about how grief has been dealt with in previous generations. Questions seek to uncover family belief systems as well as the way relationships have shifted in response to loss. Tracking symptoms and exploring related themes over at least three generations makes it more difficult for individuals to blame one another for individual deficiencies. As therapist and family members see how patterns repeat over generations, it is possible to identify the 'automatic' reactions of family members towards each other: The ability to act on the basis of more awareness of relationship process (not blaming self or others, but seeing the part each plays) can, if done repeatedly in important relationships, lead to some reduction in emotional reactivity and chronic anxiety (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 132). Clinical Practice : Detriangling This is probably the central technique in
  • 21. Bowenian therapy. The client is first helped to recognise both the subtle and the more obvious ways that they are 'triangled' by others, and the ways in which they attempt to triangle others in their turn. The therapist uses questions to facilitate the family members' awareness of their roles in family triangles. Simple open ended tracking questions, using what Herz Brown (1991) terms the four 'Ws' (who, what, when and where) help clients to become 'detectives' in their own interpersonal systems. It is often very difficult for family members to identify the triangles they participate in, and the sometimes covert ways in which they detour anxiety. An example would be a client who was struggling to understand her negativity towards her father. When questioning included her mother's role in these emotions, the client began to see that her view of her father was influenced by her position in a triangle. As her mother's ally in this triangle, she viewed her father as the inadequate husband who left her mother feeling needy. Once triangles have been identified, family members are helped to plan ways of communicating a neutral position to others, leaving the dyad to communicate directly with each other. The goal is for a family member to find a less reactive position in the face of the other's anxiety. This will require different stances in different systems, ranging from refusing to discuss the deficiencies of another behind his/her back, to reversing one's usual reaction in a triangle. For example, when the predictable pattern in the family system is to keep distance between those who haven't been able to work out their problems, the therapist helps a family member to plan strategies that shift their usual role in maintaining the avoidance. The family member might encourage more involvement between the conflictual twosome, or change the subject when invited to discuss the conflict. Reversal is a key detriangling technique. When for example a family member A complains about how uncaring another person is, person C reverses the predictable sympathetic response, substituting a casual comment about how considerate person B seems for not putting demands on A's time and energy. Unlike a strategic
  • 22. intervention, the goal of any detriangling stance is not to change the other's relationship but to express one's neutrality about it. A calm and thoughtful neutral stance prevents one from anxiously reacting to the tension of another relationship by 'taking sides'. Clinical Practice : Coaching: Family Therapy with an Individual Another distinguishing feature of Bowen's model is its validity in working with a single adult. The term 'coaching' describes the work of the therapist giving input and support for adult clients who are attempting to develop greater differentiation in their families of origin. Clients should feel in charge of their own change efforts, with the therapist acting as a consultant. Bowen thought that a person's efforts to be more differentiated would be more productive when the focus shifted away from the intensity of the nuclear family to the previous generation. The emphasis is on self-directed efforts to detriangle from family of origin patterns. An individual's efforts can modify a triangle, which in turn ripples through to change in the whole extended family. Bowen described 'coaching' as 'family psychotherapy with one family member' (Bowen, 1971 in Bowen, 1978: 233). This therapy takes on the flavour of teaching, as clients learn about the predicable patterns of triangles. The therapist supports their efforts in returning to their families to observe and learn about these patterns. Clients practise controlling their emotional reactivity in their family and report their struggles and progress in following sessions. During family of origin coaching, clients use letters, telephone calls, visits and research about previous generations to gain a systemic perspective on their family's emotional processes and a sense of their own inheritance of these patterns. The therapist prepares clients for the anxiety they will encounter if they shift from their customary roles in their families of origin. Any such changes will inevitably disturb the predictable balance of family patterns and therefore heighten anxiety and resistance. Change is viewed as a three step process where: a. one takes a new position, b. family members react and c. the new stance is maintained in the face of pressure to revert to the original
  • 23. position (Herz Brown, 1991). Bowen (1978) emphasised that it is what happens in step 'c' that really determines whether change occurs. Current Developments Bowen's model has been adopted and developed by many prominent therapists. Rather than attempt to summarise all of these developments, I shall focus on the applications of the model by Betty Carter and Monica McGoldrick which have influenced the practice of the Family Institute of Westchester in New York and the Family Institute of New Jersey. Since the early 1980s, the work of Carter, McGoldrick and their colleagues has expanded Bowen's framework to include attention to the family life cycle (Carter and McGoldrick, 1980, 1988.) As well as the 'vertical' flow of anxiety through the generations, Carter included an assessment of 'horizontal' stress as families move through various stages of the life cycle. Vertical and horizontal patterns converge, as multigenerational tensions impact on the ways that life cycle tasks and disruptions are negotiated. The stress of life cycle changes affects the choice of family of origin issues focused upon in the current generation. Using a life cycle perspective, symptom development is viewed in the context of an unresolved adjustment to a life cycle task. Acknowledging the significance of gender, race, ethnicity and class on a family's progression through life cycle stages was an important development in family assessment (eg. McGoldrick, Pearce and Giordano, 1982; Carter et al., 1988; McGoldrick, Anderson and Walsh, 1988; Herz Brown, 1991). This much broader focus provides what Carter has called a 'multi-contextual lens'. These variables are part of the context of the family's 'horizontal' story and underlie the potent themes of a family's multigenerational legacy. Patterns of gender across the generations are viewed as powerfully contributing to the roles that people occupy in the family emotional system. The inclusion of gender sensitivity in a Bowenian framework means that the therapist helps clients to look not only at patterns of relating over the generations but also to critique the roles they occupy in relationships. Such a focus is not confined to the family system's gender expectations
  • 24. but includes questions that look for connections to socially defined gender roles. Betty Carter, in developing her work from the women's project (Carter et al., 1988), has outlined how Bowen's key concepts (fusion, differentiation and triangles) need to be viewed differently from a feminist position. Gender roles will determine the way men and women express fusion, with women socialised to be dependent and approval seeking and men socialised to withdraw and emotionally 'cut off'. Carter asserts that the concept of fusion can easily be misused to pathologise the 'over-involved female' while overlooking the distant male. With a 'gender sensitive lens', a Bowenian therapist validates rather than pathologises the relational concerns of women and explores ways that men can take responsibilities in this sphere. The distancing of a male will be seen not only as a symptom of lack of differentiation but also as a socially prescribed reaction. Likewise, the nature of a relationship triangle is influenced by gender related behaviour. Carter illustrates the different ways a therapist might view a triangle with and without the feminist lens. The triangle of a husband in a distant position, with his wife and mother in conflict, would be viewed by a feminist Bowenian therapist as 'a case of two women bumping into each other as each tries to carry out her family responsibilities in the face of the man's withdrawal' (Carter et al., 1988). Interventions will respect the women's roles and dilemmas and focus on how the husband can choose to be more involved in both significant relationships. Without such a lens, the detriangling strategy would typically be to have the husband set more boundaries with his mother - which has the effect of preserving the gendered stereotype of the 'possessive' mother in law. The therapist is challenged to recognise that no intervention is free from societal constructs in regard to gender and power (including race, ethnicity, class and sexual orientation) so that 'every intervention will have a different and special meaning for each sex' (Carter et al., 1988). Thus therapists expand their questioning to ask about the relational impact of each spouse's income and ethnicity. The
  • 25. organisation of child care and housework is also explored. Therapists are encouraged to challenge men's excuses that work prevents family involvement and women's expectations about financial support (Carter, 1996). An awareness of the impact of therapists' own value system on their therapy is also stressed (Carter, 1992). For Bowenian therapists in the nineties, the core of Bowen's theory of symptom development and change remains unaltered. What has been added is attention to how wider socio- political issues of power and hierarchy are played out as couple or family problems. A broad range of systemic techniques such as restorying and circular questioning can readily be incorporated into the model (Carter and McGoldrick, 1988). Critique Of Bowen's Model Bowen's model of family therapy is perhaps most distinctive for its depth of evaluation beyond symptoms in the present. Its focus on emotional processes over the generations and on individuals' differentiation within their systemic context offers family therapists a multi-level view that has usually been reserved for psychodynamic therapies. Bowen's model pays attention to the emotional interaction of therapists and their clients and expects that the process of therapy must in some way be applied to the therapists' own lives, so that they are able to remain meta to the client family system. A number of Bowenian therapists acknowledge that the wider focus of Bowen's model can be a drawback in that many clients want only to address symptom relief in the nuclear family (Young, 1991). For the Bowenian therapist, symptom reduction is seen only as the ground work from which families can proceed less anxiously towards working on detriangling and improved levels of differentiation. Herein lies a clear danger of discrepancies in client and therapist goals. While Bowenian therapy has been embraced by some leading feminist therapists, such as Betty Carter and Harriet Goldhor Lerner, it has also received its share of criticism from a feminist perspective. Deborah Leupnitz (1988) points out that Bowen, along with other male family therapy pioneers, has paid rather too much attention to the mother's contribution to symptom development in the child.
  • 26. Some support for this can be found by scanning the index to Kerr and Bowen (1988), where 'fathers' do not warrant a category yet 'mothers' are referenced in relation to families of schizophrenics, levels of differentiation in the child, and their role in triangles (Kerr and Bowen, 1988: 395). [The index to Bowen's own collected papers, Family Therapy in Clinical Practice, however, includes one reference to 'fathers' and none to 'mothers': Eds.] A perceived over-investment by a mother in her child is seen as a sign of undifferentiation. Unlike the current feminist therapists who use the Bowenian model, Murray Bowen (along with many of his Georgetown colleagues) failed to contextualise maternal behaviour. Patriarchal assumptions about male / female roles and family organisation are not acknowledged or critiqued, which leaves women vulnerable to having their socially prescribed roles pathologised. Women are readily labelled as 'over concerned', and their active, relational role in families too easily labelled as 'fused' and 'undifferentiated'. There is no questioning of societal norms that can be seen to '[school] females into undifferentiation by teaching them always to put others' needs first' (Leupnitz, 1988: 43). The women's project in family therapy asserts that a model such as Bowen's pressures the woman to 'back off' while placating and courting the distant male (Carter et al., 1988). Carter asserts that this is not only biased against women but disrespectful of men since the model assumes men's limitations in terms of emotional engagement in therapy and family relationships. An ongoing challenge for feminist Bowenian therapists is to reconstruct a therapy language of intimacy and attachment that is not misused to imply dysfunction (Bograd, 1987; Carter et al., 1988). Another criticism that flows from the biases of Bowen's 'male defined' terminology, is that his is a therapy lacking in attention to feelings (Luepnitz, 1988). It is asserted that Bowen's therapy focuses on being rational and objective in relation to emotional processes, which relegates to a low priority the expression of emotions in therapy. My own experience of this model, with its
  • 27. invitation to explore the 'tapestry' of one's family across the generations, is that it is an emotionally intense therapy. While Bowen may emphasise the goal of helping the client learn about their family's emotional processes, in practice it is the experience of the emotions, embedded in family of origin relationships that is a key motivator for the client to undertake family of origin work. I recall Betty Carter, in asking a man about his relationship with his own father, tapping deeply into emotions that motivated him to make changes in his ways of relating. Case Example The Barret family were referred for family therapy by the individual therapist of the sixteen year old anorectic daughter, Tanya. Tanya had been hospitalised by her doctor the previous month when her weight levels were considered life threatening. To date the family had not been involved in her treatment but were now feeling that they could no longer remain on the sidelines when the risk levels were so high. Hospitalisation had also intensified family reactivity, with Tanya blaming her father for allowing her freedom to be taken away, both parents feeling angry that she could allow herself to fall so low, and her nineteen year old sister questioning how Tanya could put her family through so much worry. Stage 1: Calming the system When a family member is exhibiting life threatening symptoms, it is not realistic to expect that anxiety can be lowered to non reactive levels. In the case of the Barret family my goal was to take the focus away from Tanya's weight sufficiently to enable the family to explore each of their roles in the anxious family patterns. The other systems involved in her treatment were framed as providing her with support and monitoring the risk of her symptoms. She received individual therapy where the therapist focused on supporting her through adolescent life cycle tasks. Her doctor was responsible for monitoring her medical condition and weight gain. Family sessions could therefore concentrate on family process in dealing with Tanya's eating patterns. Stage 2: Nuclear family issues Locating the presenting problem in the broader family context revealed that the family was in the process of
  • 28. negotiating some significant changes. Around the onset of Tanya's pronounced weight loss, her older sister, Roslyn, had moved away from home to begin medical studies at university. Roslyn had previously been considered the rebel of the family but was now clearly labelled as the 'golden girl' who would make them all proud with her academic success. Family roles and the theme of economic success were identified. Mr. Barret had recently received a promotion which necessitated moving to another city. Mrs. Barret had left her job as a nurse and had not been working for the nine months following the family move. Gender themes were becoming evident as Tanya spoke of how personally she was identifying with her mother's loss of professional role. While there were numerous family changes that could inform hypotheses about her symptoms, my primary focus was the operation of family triangles in dealing with anxiety. Tanya expressed her triangled role in her parents' issues as she spoke about their emotional life. She described the stress of her father's work and reported passionately on her mother's loss of status since giving up her nursing job. She perceived her mother's life as empty, and she herself felt similarly empty and directionless. The fusion in nuclear family relationships was striking, with family members reacting to either comfort or criticise each other. During the sessions, the six year old daughter Liz passed tissues to those who looked upset, or distracted by using puppets from the play box to bring some humour into the room. I reflected to the family just how closely 'wired' to each other's feelings they all were and how readily they seemed to switch from their own issues to focus on the emotional intensity of others. Questions were asked that encouraged an awareness of this fusion, for example: [To Tanya]. 'I know you've become an expert at being the emotional voice for your parents but what would you say, just this once, if you could speak for your own needs?' [To Mr. Barret]. 'Do you have any sense of when you first started to take Tanya's symptoms so personally - as if they were directed at hurting you?' Mrs. Barret spoke of how their eldest daughter Roslyn had
  • 29. complained of feeling suffocated by being at home and how they had hardly seen her during her last few years of high school. When Roslyn was at home her relationship with her father had been highly conflictual. Now that she was at medical school Mr. Barret spoke of how proud they all were of her. He had tears in his eyes as he spoke of how Roslyn now had the chance to achieve what he had not been able to. Each of the children, to varying degrees, appeared to be triangled into their parents' emotional issues. While Roslyn and Liz were currently occupying symptom-free roles in diffusing parental anxiety, Tanya seemed stuck in a symptom-focused dance with her parents' neediness. Nuclear family triangles were tracked around family members' responses to Tanya's eating patterns. A eating behaviour closely, with Tanya becoming increasingly purging, with the latter responding in tears, saying that nobody i hearing a daily account of his wife's suspicions, would begin yelling at Tanya, saying what a disappointment she was to him. closer in support. threatened to increase distance and tension in the marriage, Mrs. Barret would suggest ways to her husband and daughter about with the family but would set up a joint outing for herself and her Dad. Stage 3: Expanding the view to previous generations While seeking to draw out the repetitive patterns in the current family experience, I also look for ways to connect present tensions to multigenerational themes. Exploration of both parents' family of origin revealed potent themes that fed into the intense struggle of the nuclear family triangle between Tanya, her father and her mother. While ever Mr Barret and Mrs Barret could worry about her, they did not have to address the relationship disappointments that they had hoped would be mended through their marriage. A key task of ongoing therapy
  • 30. was to help the parents separate these unresolved family of origin issues from their interactions with Tanya. Both parents had been in the same middle child position as Tanya, which had intensified their identification with her. Reflecting on their own adolescence and their relationship with their parents helped Mr Barret and Mrs Barret to assume a more objective stance towards their daughter. Mrs Barret was able to stop herself encouraging Tanya to look after her father following an argument. Mrs Barret was also able to see how her striving to create a different relationship from the distant and critical one she had with her own mother was getting in the way of her being able to set any limits with Tanya. Mr Barret was able to start viewing Tanya as a separate person from himself or his father and was thus more able to notice her unique strengths. This shift was a particularly painful journey for Mr Barret, who recounted his memories of his alcoholic father, who had died in an emaciated state after choking on his own vomit. The parallel to Tanya's symptoms helped to make sense of his intense reactivity in their relationship. Tanya was able to hear that her parents' reactions were more about where they had come from than about what kind of a daughter she was. During therapy she struggled to cope with the shift in family patterns. She was excluded from the triangle with her parents where she had occupied a pivotal role in helping to regulate their closeness. To assist with this shift, some sessions were held with her and her older sister Roslyn, so that the sisters could establish a connection as young adults sharing similar life cycle tasks, rather than being their parents' caretakers. A couple of months down the track, she mentioned that she had been writing to Roslyn and that they were sharing information about boyfriends that their parents were not privy to. After about five months of therapy, her weight had increased to a level which put her out of the medical risk category. At this time Mr Barret and Mrs Barret felt that they wanted to focus on some of their own family of origin issues as a couple and individually. Tanya was busy rehearsing for a school play in which she had the female
  • 31. lead, so she asked if she could take a break from family sessions and let her parents come on their own. Conclusion At a time when family therapy is rediscovering its psychoanalytic roots (Quadrio, 1986; Luepnitz, 1988; Flaskas, 1993; James, 1992), it is important to be clear about the distinctions between psychodynamic and Bowenian approaches. While both models are comprehensive in accounting for many aspects of human experience, the essential difference is that Bowen's focus is not the intrapsychic experience of the individual. It focuses on the structure and workings of the system so that the individual can forge a different systemic role. While in psychoanalysis, self understanding comes through the vehicle of the therapist / client relationship, in Bowenian therapy it comes from the between- session, planned action of the 'self in the system'. In giving an overview of Bowen's model, this paper risks oversimplifying its in-depth formulation of family process. My aim has been to summarise Bowen's core concepts and to give a flavour of how these influence the focus of therapy. One needs to be mindful however, of potential pitfalls when using a family of origin model. Bowen's focus on the distant to solve the proximate may take families on therapeutic paths which go beyond their request for the shortest possible road to symptom relief. Without recent significant socio-political additions, Bowen's theory decontextualises relationship patterns that are powerfully informed by gender, ethnicity and class. Those who adhere to a Bowenian framework speak of the appeal of its attention to complex family patterns in both vertical and horizontal time. Perhaps what is most distinctive about Bowen's theory amongst systemic therapies, is that it directs therapists to consider their own roles in their families of origin so that they can personally experience the theory in order to appreciate its clinical application. References Bograd, M., 1987. Enmeshment: Fusion or Relatedness: A Conceptual Analysis, Journal of Psychotherapy and the Family, 3, 4: 65-80. Bowen, M., 1966. The Use of Family Theory in Clinical Practice, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 7: 345-374. In M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen,
  • 32. M., 1971. Family Therapy and Family Group Therapy. In H. Kaplan and B. Sadok, (Eds), Comprehensive Group Psychotherapy, Baltimore, Williams and Wilkins: 384-421. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen, M., 1971a. Principles and Techniques of Multiple Family Therapy. In J. Bradt and C. Moynihan, (Eds), Systems Theory, [no publisher stated] Washington, DC. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen, M., 1972. On the Differentiation of Self. First published anonymously in J. Framo, (Ed.), Family Interaction: A Dialogue Between Family Researchers and Family Therapists, NY, Springer: 111-173. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen, M., 1975. Family Therapy After Twenty Years. In S. Arieti, (Ed.), American Handbook of Psychiatry, Vol 5, 2nd edn, NY, Basic Books. Repr. in M. Bowen, 1978 (see below). Bowen, M., 1978. Family Therapy in Clinical Practice, NY and London, Jason Aronson. Carter, E., 1991, My Reluctant Ancestor, The Family Therapy Networker, March-April: 40-41. Carter, E., 1992. Techniques to Help the Therapist to Include the Socio-Cultural Context in Couples Therapy. Unpublished handout, Family Institute of Westchester. Carter, E. and McGoldrick, M., (Eds), 1980. The Family Life Cycle: A Framework for Family Therapy, NY, Gardner Press. Carter, E. and McGoldrick, M., (Eds), 1988. The Changing Family Life Cycle, 2nd edn. NY, Gardner Press. Carter, E. and McGoldrick M., 1991. 'Foreword'. In F. Herz Brown, (Ed.), Reweaving the Family Tapestry, NY and London, Norton. Carter, E. (and Peters, J.), 1996. Love, Honour and Negotiate, NY, Pocket Books. Carter, E., 1988, with Walters, M., Papp, P., and Silverstein, O. The Invisible Web, Gender Patterns in Family Relationships, NY, Guilford. Flaskas, C., 1993. On the Project of Using Psychoanalytic Ideas in Systemic Therapy: A Discussion Paper, ANZJFT 14, 1: 9-15. Goodnow, K. K. and Lim, M. G., 1997. Bowenian Theory in Application: A Case Study, Journal of Family Psychotherapy, 8, 1: 33-41. Guerin, P., 1976. Family Therapy, Theory and Practice, NY, Gardner Press. Guerin, P., Fay, L., Burden, S. and Kautto, J., 1987. The
  • 33. Evaluation and Treatment of Marital Conflict, NY, Basic Books. Guerin, P., Fogarty, T., Fay, L. and Kautto, J., 1996. Working with Relationship Triangles, NY, London, Guilford. Hare- Mustin, R., 1978. A Feminist Approach to Family Therapy, Family Process 17: 181-194. Herz Brown, F., 1991. The Model. In F. Herz Brown, (Ed.), Reweaving the Family Tapestry, NY, Norton. James, K., 1989. When Twos Are Really Threes: The Triangular Dance in Couple Conflict, ANZJFT, 10, 3: 179- 189. James, K., 1992. Why Feminists Have Become Interested in Psychoanalysis, Journal of Feminist Family Therapy, 4, 3-4. Kerr, M., and Bowen, M., 1988. Family Evaluation: An Approach Based on Bowen Theory, NY, Norton. Kerr, M., 1991. Living The Theory, The Family Therapy Networker, March- April: 39-40. Lederer, G. S., and Lewis, J., 1991. The Transition to Couplehood. In F. Herz Brown, (Ed.), Reweaving the Family Tapestry, NY, Norton. Lerner, H., 1983. Female Dependency in Context: Some Theoretical and Technical Considerations, American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 53: 697- 705. Lerner, H., 1988. The Dance of Anger, NY, Harper & Row. Lerner, H., 1990. The Dance of Intimacy, NY, Harper & Row. Lerner, H., 1993. The Dance of Deception, NY, Harper & Row. Luepnitz, D., 1988. The Family Interpreted: Psychoanalysis, Feminism and Family Therapy, NY, Basic Books. McGoldrick, M., Pearce, J. and Giordano J., (Eds), 1982. Ethnicity and Family Therapy, NY, Guilford. McGoldrick, M. and Gerson, R., 1985. Genograms in Family Assessment, NY, Norton. McGoldrick, M., Anderson, C. and Walsh, F., (Eds), 1988. Women in Families, NY, Norton. McGoldrick, M. and Walsh, F. (Eds), 1991. Living Beyond Loss, NY, Norton. McGoldrick, M., 1995. You Can Go Home Again, NY, Norton. Minuchin, S., 1974. Families & Family Therapy, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press. Quadrio, C., 1986. Analysis and System: A Marriage, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 18: 184- 187. Schnarch, D., 1991. Constructing the Sexual Crucible, NY, Norton. Schnarch, D., 1997. Passionate Marriage, NY, Norton. Toman,W., 1961. Family Constellation, NY,
  • 34. Springer. 3rd rev. edn, 1976. Wylie, M. Sykes., 1991. Family Therapy's Neglected Prophet, The Family Therapy Networker, March-April: 25- 37. Young, P., 1991. Families with Adolescents. In F. Herz Brown, Reweaving The Family Tapestry, NY, Norton. Acknowledgment The author wishes to thank Kerrie James for ideas helpful in the writing of this article. Coming to grips with family systems theory in a collaborative, learning environment. [email protected] http://www.thefsi.com.