How to Coach Yourself and Others Coaching Families | Page 32
Salvador Minuchin
Born and raised in Argentina, Salvador Minuchin began his career as a family therapist in the early 1960's
when he discovered two patterns common to troubled families: some are "enmeshed," chaotic and
tightly interconnected, while others are "disengaged," isolated and seemingly unrelated. When
Minuchin first burst onto the scene, his immediate impact was due to his dazzling clinical artistry. This
compelling man with the elegant Latin accent would provoke, seduce, bully, or bewilder families into
changing -- as the situation required -- setting a standard against which other therapists still judge their best
work. But even Minuchin's legendary dramatic flair didn't have the same galvanizing impact as his
structural theory of families.
In his classic text, Families and Family Therapy (Minuchin, 1974) Minuchin taught family therapists to see
what they were looking at. Through the lens of structural family theory, previously puzzling interactions
suddenly swam into focus. Where others saw only chaos and cruelty, Minuchin helped us understand that
families are structured in "subsystems" with "boundaries," their members shadowing to steps they
do not see.
In 1962 Minuchin formed a productive professional relationship with Jay Haley, who was then in Palo Alto.
In 1965 Minuchin became the director of the Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic, which eventually became
the world's leading center for family therapy and training. At the Philadelphia Clinic, Haley and Minuchin
developed a training program for members of the local black community as paraprofessional family
therapists in an effort to more effectively related to the urban blacks and Latinos in the surrounding
community.
In 1969, Minuchin, Haley, Braulio Montalvo, and Bernice Rosman developed a highly successful family
therapy training program that emphasized hands-on experience, on-line supervision, and the use of
videotapes to learn and apply the techniques of structural family therapy. Minuchin stepped down as
director of the Phildelphia Clinic in 1975 to pursue his interest in treating families with psychosomatic
illnesses and to continue writing some of the most influential books in the field of family therapy. In 1981,
Minuchin established Family Studies, Inc., in New York, a center committed to teaching family therapists.
Minuchin retired in 1996 and currently lives with his wife Patricia in Boston.
Jay Haley
A brilliant strategist and devastating critic, Jay Haley was a dominating figure in developing the Palo Alto
Group's communications model and strategic family therapy, which became popular in the 1970's. He
studied under three of the most influential pioneers in the evolution of family therapy - Gregory Bateson,
Milton Erickson, and Salvador Minuchin, and combined ideas from each of these innovative thinkers to
form his own unique brand of family therapy.
In 1953 Haley was studying for a master's degree in communication at Stanford University when Gregory
Bateson invited him to work on the schizophrenia project. Haley met with patients and their families to
observe the communicative style of schizophrenics in a natural environment. This work had an enormous
impact in shaping the development of family therapy.
Haley developed his therapeutic skills under the supervision of master hypnotist Milton Erickson from 1954
to 1960. Haley developed a brief therapy model which focused on the context and possible function of the
patient's symptoms and used directives to instruct patients to act in ways that were counterproductive to
their maladaptive behavior. Haley believed that it was far more important to get patients to actively do
something about their problems rather than help them to understand why they had these problems.
Haley was instrumental in bridging the gap between strategic and structural approaches to family therapy by
looking beyond simple dyadic relationships and exploring his interest in triangular, inter generational
relationships, or "perverse triangles." Haley believed that a patient's symptoms arose out of an
incongruence between manifest and covert levels of communication with others and served to give the
patient a sense of control in their interpersonal relationships. Accordingly, Haley thought that the
healing aspect of the patient-therapist relationship involved getting patients to take responsibility for their
actions and to take a stand in the therapeutic relationship, a process he called "therapeutic paradox."
Haley conducted research at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto until he joined Salvador Minuchin at
the Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic in 1967. At the Philadelphia Clinic, Haley pursued his interests in
training and supervision in family therapy and was the director of family therapy research for ten years. He
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