Contextual Fam therapy Flashcards
Debts or Filial Responsibility
Contextual Family Therapy
As an account for the child’s experience of the degrees of fairness and ethical consideration from their parents toward them, parents will either earn debts (resulting in destructive entitlement) or filial responsibility (resulting in loyalty).
Deparentification Process:
Contextual Family Therapy
This is a two part process.(1) The therapist becomes temporarily parentified to relieve the parentified child and then (2) addresses the larger spectrum of family dynamics to work toward systemic change.
Destructive Entitlement:
Contextual Family Therapy
This results when individuals experience the denial of entitlement from their family of origin, and in turn, seek what they believed to be owed to them through a different relationship—typically, their family of creation.
Contextual Family Therapy Key Concepts:
Audio File 7:
Transgenerational Models of Family Therapy.
~first make sure basal needs are being met before beginning therapy like Maslow
~trustworthiness and reliability is what healthy families functioned on.
~ goals of therapy: focused on Working Through problems and individuals taking responsibility for actions and a family seperated from undue guilt from legacy and taking good responsible laity for actions
Primary Contributor:
Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy
Key Terms
4 primary dimensions:
- Facts
- Psychology
- Transactions
- Relational Ethics
Contextual: Debts or Filial Responsibility: Deparentification Process: Destructive Entitlement: Entitlement: Equitable Asymmetry: Exoneration: Facts: Filial Loyalty: Ledger: Legacy: Loyalty: Merit: Multidirectional Partiality: Parentification: Psychology: Relational Ethics: Revolving Slate of Injustice: Split Filial Loyalty: Transactions: Primary Interventions
Contextual:
Contextual Family Therapy
Contextual refers to the systemic nature of all that are impacted by the therapeutic effort. Also refers to the social and political context within a family.
Entitlement:
Contextual Family Therapy
What individuals are inherently due from others in their family as well as what is earned from others based upon behavior toward them.
Equitable Asymmetry:
Contextual Family Therapy
Refers to the concept that children are not able to care for themselves and are entirely dependent upon their parents—making them both incredibly vulnerable or delightfully entitled based upon the circumstances of their upbringing.
Legacy:
Contextual Family Therapy
Certain attributes or qualities that are attributed to an individual as an account of being born to his or her parents.
Loyalty:
Contextual Family Therapy
Central to the theory of Contextual Family Therapy, loyalty refers to an individual’s internalized expectations of and obligations to his or her family of origin. This concept is assumed to exert a powerful influence over the individual’s functioning.
Ledger:
Contextual Family Therapy
The manner in which individuals within a family keep track of and balance debts and entitlements.
Merit:
Contextual Family Therapy
Merit is earned when parents are responsible and ethical with the equitable asymmetry within the parent-child relationship. If they are ethical and fair, they earn merit, which rewards them with loyalty from their childhood as they mature into adults.
Parentification:
Contextual Family Therapy
This term is different from parentified child in Structural Family Therapy. Here, it refers to a process where a child attempts to earn love from their parent by acting as their caretaker. The child takes on the role of parent for the parent.
Psychology:
Contextual Family Therapy
One of the 4 dimensions of individual and relational psychology that interact with one another in Contextual Family Therapy. Psychology refers to the person’s internal experience of the world, including thoughts, desires, emotions, and meaning. As Facts occur externally to the individual, psychology develops internally within the individual.
Multidirectional Partiality:
Contextual Family Therapy
This concept is similar to neutrality while expounding upon the importance that the therapist remains accountable for everyone whose well-being is potentially impacted by a therapeutic intervention. This concept elaborates that every intervention must serve the best interests of everyone involved.
Exoneration:
Contextual Family Therapy
The process in which an individual restores balance within his or her ledger.