How to Coach Yourself and Others Coaching Families | Page 99
Bowen’s Strategic Family Therapy
Contents
Introduction
Differentiation of Self
Triangles
The Nuclear Family Emotional Processes
The Family Projection Process
The Multigenerational Transmission Process
Sibling Position
Emotional Cutoff
Societal Emotional Processes
Normal Family Development
Family Disorders
Goals of Therapy
Techniques
Family Therapy with One Person
Introduction
The pioneers of family therapy recognized that current social and cultural forces shape our values about
ourselves and our families, our thoughts about what is "normal" and "healthy," and our expectations about
how the world works. However, Bowen was the first to realize that the history of our family creates a
template which shapes the values, thoughts, and experiences of each generation, as well as how that
generation passes down these things to the next generation.
Bowen was a medical doctor and the oldest child in a large cohesive family from Tennessee. He studied
schizophrenia, thinking the cause for it began in mother-child symbiosis, which created an anxious and
unhealthy attachment. He moved from studying dyads (two way relationships like parent-child and parentparent) to triads (three way relationships like parent-parent-child and grandparent-parent-child) afterward.
At a conference organized by Framo, one of his students, he explained his theory of how families develop
and function, and presented as a case study his own family.
Bowen's theory focuses on the balance of two forces. The first is togetherness and the second is
individuality. Too much togetherness creates fusion and prevents individuality, or developing one's own
sense of self. Too much individuality results in a distant and estranged family.
Bowen introduced eight interlocking concepts to explain family development and functioning, each of
which is described below.
The family systems theory is a theory introduced by Dr. Murray Bowen that suggests that individuals
cannot be understood in isolation from one another, but rather as a part of their family, as the family
is an emotional unit. Families are systems of interconnected and interdependent individuals, none of whom
can be understood in isolation from the system.
The family system
According to Bowen, a family is a system in which each member has a role to play and rules to respect.
Members of the system are expected to respond to each other in a certain way according to their role, which
is determined by relationship agreements.
Within the boundaries of the system, patterns develop as certain family member's behaviour is caused by
and causes other family member's behaviours in predictable ways.
Maintaining the same pattern of behaviours within a system may lead to balance in the family system, but
also to dysfunction.
For example, if a husband is depressive and cannot pull himself together, the wife may need to take up more
responsibilities to pick up the slack. The change in roles may maintain the stability in the relationship, but it
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