Family Constellation Therapy PT1
Description
Ever wonder why some clients carry guilt or grief that doesn’t match their personal history? We take a clear, practical look at family constellation therapy and how hidden orders and loyalties can create entanglements that ripple through generations. Drawing on systemic principles—belonging, honoring those who came before, and balance in giving and taking—we show how symptoms like chronic anxiety, intimacy struggles, and repeating relationship patterns can be the system’s attempt to restore equilibrium.
We walk through the full arc of the work in a way clinicians can use right away. Preparation sets the frame: mapping family structure, pivotal events, and readiness. The constellation phase brings the system into space through representatives or objects, allowing unconscious dynamics to surface as felt experience. Integration then anchors the shifts over time, translating insight into new boundaries, steadier relationships, and a grounded sense of place in the family. Throughout, we keep a phenomenological stance—following what arises in the room rather than imposing a predefined story.
You’ll hear concrete tools you can apply in solo sessions or groups: spatial representations that make the invisible visible, movement interventions that restore closeness or distance, ritual elements that honor the excluded, and language that acknowledges hard truths and clarifies generational lines. We highlight how to assess for disproportionate symptoms, what progress looks like in everyday life, and why systemic resolution—not mere symptom suppression—leads to durable change.
If you’re preparing for a licensing exam or refining your systemic toolbox, this conversation offers a grounded guide to seeing clients in context and supporting change that holds. Subscribe, share with a colleague who loves systemic work, and leave a review with one insight you’re taking into practice.
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This podcast is not associated with the NBCC, AMFTRB, ASW, ANCC, NASP, NAADAC, CCMC, NCPG, CRCC, or any state or governmental agency responsible for licensure.




