Theory and Practice of Couples and Family Counseling. James Robert Bitter

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Theory and Practice of Couples and Family Counseling - James Robert Bitter страница 22

Theory and Practice of Couples and Family Counseling - James Robert Bitter

Скачать книгу

with disturbing behaviors within the family. Among his many innovations, he began sending therapists into homes to study families in their natural environment. In the 1950s, he was organizing panels and meetings within a number of different professional organizations to address family practice.

      Over the years, the Ackerman Institute would attract many highly regarded family therapists who would make major contributions to the field, including scholar-practitioners like Peggy Papp and Lynn Hoffman. Papp was one of many Bowen-influenced therapists who focused on the role of women in families, and like Hoffman she would bring strategic interventions to the work at the Ackerman Institute before her work would evolve into a more exploratory approach. We return to the work of both of these women later.

      Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy also started his career as a psychoanalytically trained psychiatrist. Born in Hungary, he came to the United States in 1948. In the 1950s, he would team up with Geraldine Spark, a psychoanalytic social worker, and together they would create an open approach to family counseling that focused on reciprocal roles, ethical commitments of family members to one another, and a multigenerational focus (Boszormenyi-Nagy & Spark, 1973/1984). In 1957, Boszormenyi-Nagy opened the first Family Therapy Department at Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute. There he attracted a number of key figures in both individual and family therapy, including Ray Birdwhistell, who introduced kinesics (body language) to the field; Gerald Zuk, who focused on triadic family counseling; and James Framo, who along with Murray Bowen would focus his work on multiple generations.

      For Boszormenyi-Nagy, the central issues in family counseling were trust and loyalty. These attributes had to be shared and evenly exchanged so that there was a balance in the family; that is, every member could count on other members in the balance of the family ledger. This distinctly ethical approach to family counseling was thoroughly described by Boszormenyi-Nagy (1987) and by Boszormenyi-Nagy and Framo (1965/1985).

      James Framo would eventually leave for Southern California, where he would begin to define a bridge between individual and multigenerational family counseling (Framo, 1992). His emphasis on therapists knowing themselves and paying attention to family-of-origin relationships places him clearly in the line of influence that would eventually become object relations family counseling as well as Bowen family therapy.

      Other key figures had originally been psychoanalytically trained but went on to develop early approaches to family counseling. Theodore Lidz and his colleagues at Yale University would focus on fathering practices in families with schizophrenic patients, relieving mothers of their often-blamed position. Lyman Wynne, a Harvard-trained psychiatrist, headed the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in the early 1950s. His work, which focused on dysfunctional communication in families, gave us such concepts as pseudomutuality, a facade of cooperation that masks conflict and derails intimacy; pseudohostility, a rather stereotyped approach to bickering or fighting that again masks a deeper hostility; and the rubber fence, or the ability of tightly controlled, pathological families to let members function in the outside world yet haul them back into family isolation if they go beyond simple tasks like going to school or work. And John Elderkin Bell was inspired by what he believed was John Bowlby’s work with a family in England and returned to Clark University in Massachusetts to invent family group counseling.

      Dreikurs opened the Alfred Adler Institute in 1954 and began teaching Adlerian open forum family counseling in colleges, community agencies, and schools throughout the Chicago area. In a course at Northwestern University, he provided initial training to two students, Ray Lowe and Manford Sonstegard, who would start the spread of his methods across the United States. Lowe brought Dreikurs to Oregon, where he would engage the interest of Oscar Christensen. Christensen would later leave Oregon to teach at the University of Arizona, where he would train family counselors for more than 30 years. Similarly, Sonstegard brought Dreikurs to Iowa, where “Sonste” had started his work. When Sonste moved to West Virginia University, he began to train Adlerian family counselors and paraprofessionals throughout the eastern part of the United States and in Europe. In 1974, I joined Sonste in West Virginia; together, we would train Adlerian family counselors for more than 30 years.

      One of Dreikurs’s other students was Don Dinkmeyer, a man destined to be one of the most prolific writers in Adlerian circles. Together with his son, Don Dinkmeyer, Jr., and other Adlerian leaders, like Len Sperry and Jon Carlson, Don Dinkmeyer set out to define Adlerian practice with couples and families. The Dinkmeyers also developed STEP: Systematic Training for Effective Parenting (Dinkmeyer et al., 1997). Today no two people have done more to articulate the Adlerian approach to couples and families than Len Sperry and Jon Carlson.

      Murray Bowen

      Like Ackerman, Bowen too was a psychiatrist at the Menninger Clinic in the late 1940s; he was originally trained there in psychoanalysis, but his work soon focused on relational family processes. By the early 1950s, Bowen was already working on the relationship between mother and child in schizophrenic families. It was at Menninger that Bowen first experimented with having family members (mother and child) live together in cottages at the clinic. Bowen expanded this experiment when, in 1954, he left the clinic to work at NIMH. At NIMH, Bowen hospitalized whole families of schizophrenic patients for study and research purposes. Bowen was at NIMH for only 5 years before moving to the Department of Psychiatry at Georgetown University. Although Bowen was never able to carry on the level of family research at Georgetown that he had achieved at NIMH, he was able to develop perhaps a more complete family systems theory than any of the early pioneers.

      At Georgetown, Bowen offered training programs that would eventually produce some of the most important leaders in family counseling. Phillip Guerin and Tom Fogarty greatly enhanced Bowen’s work with triangles, describing a five-step process for detriangulation in both individual and family counseling (Guerin et al., 1996).

      Betty Carter and Monica McGoldrick, both trained by Bowen, would develop the family life cycle (McGoldrick et al., 2015), and Monica McGoldrick would lead the way in the development of genograms (McGoldrick et al., 2020) and our understanding of race, culture, and gender in family practice (McGoldrick & Hardy, 2019). Indeed, without Monica McGoldrick there would not be a fully developed set of lenses on race, culture, and gender.

      Carl

Скачать книгу