CHAPTER 4.
THE GENEOGRAM: THE FAMILY TREE AS A TOOL

I keep six honest serving-men,
(They taught me all I knew)
Their names are What and Where and When
And How and Why and Who.

R. Kipling, Just So Stories

A geneogram is a visual diagram of family relatedness, structure and history. It combines the usual demographic date such as age, sex and marital status with the dates of important life events such as births, marriages, divorces, and deaths. The geneogram also graphically represents the skeletal relationship structure of two or more generations of a family upon which their collisions, patterns, bonds, and the transgenerational passage of their culture may be superimposed.

The geneogram is more than a standard geneologic device or family tree. Although it does contain the usual information about the ancestry of individuals and their families, it also serves to depict the important relationship structures and patterns both past and present. It is the equivalent of a family life chart both as the family now exists, as it existed in the past and through speculation as it will or might exist in the future.

Although the geneogram is fairly widely used by family therapists, few articles have been written giving details of the rationale for its useNote 1 or the method of its construction. The paucity of articles may relate to the difficulty in describing an ongoing visual and dynamic process in the static medium of printed words.

Gathering information is only one of the many functions of the geneogram. For example, the geneogram functions as an educational tool. It can educate the family into an organic view of itself, provide a rationale for changes in secrecy boundaries between family members, and allows a working blueprint for change to be explained clearly to the family involved. The process of construction within the session can engage all family members in a common task, neutralise destructive conflicts temporarily and bridge intergenerational barriers. The geneogram also allows the therapist a quick and thorough entry into the family's cultural development, tradition, and belief, enabling the therapist to make sense out of the gestalt of those family members present in the therapy session. Finally the geneogram provides a neutral task which may relieve the anxiety of a new therapist when confronting the
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unknown, possibly hostile or engulfing family.

Construction of the Geneogram

The geneogram may be constructed on a blackboard in the office in the presence of one or more family members, or it may be drawn by each family member on paper once the symbols used in its construction have been explained. After having been taught the means of construction of a geneogram family members can be asked to construct their own diagrams at home. In this way they can gather information from sources in their family at home to fill in missing data about their family.

Figure 4.1 Key to Geneograms

Figure 4.1 Key to Geneograms

The symbols used in the construction of a geneogram are shown in Figure 4.1. These simple symbols can be used to build up a picture of the most complex family structures. A solid line (______) between a circle and a square indicates along-term union, either a marriage or a longstanding relationship such as common-law marriage. It is a symbol indicating that heterosexual bonding has been established. A broken line (------) between a circle and a square indicated a short-term sexual liaison, such as an affair which may be included because of its importance to the development of the family quandary. A line descending from the union between a man and a woman, whether a marriage (solid line) or an affair (broken line) indicates the offspring or issue of that relationship. Children are usually listed in order of birth date from left to right, including miscarriages, and are joined on a solid horizontal line if they are full siblings. Full names may be written above each of the circles and squares and ages may be written within them. Marriage dates are written above the union line while dates of separation and divorce are written immediately below the union line.
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Figure 4.2 Geneogram of a Nuclear Family

Figure 4.2 Geneogram of a Nuclear Family

Figure 4.2 is a visual representation of a nuclear family. The geneogram at its present stage reveals that Mrs. Eva Mae (Rees) Smollett, a 54-year old housewife, married a lawyer, Henry James Smollett, on the 29 February 1948. Following a miscarriage in 1950, they produced a daughter in 1954 named Rose Mae, and a son, Ian Noel, in 1957. Seven years later, in 1963, Eva had an affair with an unnamed man and separated from her husband. The separation was temporary. So far the geneogram depicts a two-generational family structure whose fourth-dimensional origin occurred with the marital bond in 1948. That bond was stressed by an affair and temporary separation in 1963.

Figure 4.3 continues the geneogram construction further back in time and into the extended family including grandparents, uncles, aunts, and cousins. Arthur Michael Rees, a farmer, and Rose Mae married in 1922. They had three children, Kevin, Neal and Eva Mae. Their respective ages at the time of the interview were sixty, fifty-eight and fifty-four. Neither Kevin nor Neal married. Arthur Rees died in 1963 while Rose Mae died in 1967. George Smollett, a lawyer, married his wife, Rose in 1919. They had two children, George Andrew, fifty-eight, and Henry James. For convenience the convention of listing offspring by date of birth from left to right has been ignored in order to show the combination of the two families of origin at the time of marriage. The ages within the circles or squares and the dates of birth give enough
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Figure 4.3 A geneogram of an Extended Family

A geneogram of an Extended Family
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information to keep the birth order straight. Alternatively, separate diagrams for each side of the family may be done before combining them. To continue the description of the family shown in Figure 4.3, George Andrew married and had two daughters whose names and ages were unavailable. Rose Smollett died in 1940 while Rose Mae Rees died in 1967 from unnamed causes. Arthur Michael Rees died in 1963 from a heart attack, and George Smollett died in 1957 from unnamed causes.

A comparison of the foregoing diagrams with their written explanations should clarify the usefulness of drawing out the family structure rather than writing it down. The organised visual display depicts relationships with an overview lacking in the verbal description.

Up to this point the family diagrammed has been a relatively simple one. There are families whose complexities can tax the imagination in attempting to record their geneogram. Three of the most common complexities are reconstituted families, multiple births, and adoption. The geneogram can be of special use in recording reconstituted families. The therapist can clearly delineate the origin of each of the various children in the family to himself as well as to the family members who may never have encountered such a factual display of the structural anomalies in their family.

Figure 4.4 shows all of the previously mentioned complexities in one geneogram. The family is actually a composite of several families. June and David Rudge were married in 1950 and produced three children, Joan, and twins Simon and Justin. The twins are represented on a separate vertical line branching into two further vertical lines. That they are twins should be clear from their single date of birth as well as their equal ages. David Rudge died in 1955 in a car accident. June remarried in 1960 to Barry Hamblin. Barry had been previously married from 1958 to Heather who was pregnant with Margaret prior to marriage. On his divorce in 1960, in which June was "the other woman", he remarried to June. Heather remarried in 1965 to Mark Sutcliffe who was fifteen years older than she. Heather had again been pregnant prior to marriage. She gave birth to John in 1966 and three years later gave birth to Josie, now a ten-year-old mentally subnormal child. June and Barry found that they couldn't have children so they adopted Dora in 1970. Mark Sutcliffe adopted his stepdaughter, Margaret, in 1970. Margaret married in 1978. In this composite family it would be possible to imagine that Margaret and her husband were referred for marital problems and that Margaret still maintained relationships with all of her relatives. It should be clear from the geneogram that there are solutions to drawing the most tangled of family relationships.
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Figure 4.4 A Complex Reconstituted Family

Figure 4.4 A Complex Reconstituted Family
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So far my description has been limited to the mechanics of constructing a geneogram. This description has been necessary in order to convey to the reader the methods of recording, but has not yet dealt with the dynamic construction process.

The Process of Geneogram Construction

The production of the geneogram is a process in which the family members and the therapist must co-operate. The process is complex and may involve a lengthy interaction between the family members, the therapist and the diagram being constructed. It is within that process that the geneogram ceases to be a sterile shorthand of history and relatedness. It becomes instead a tool used to explore the family quandary, its origins and its possible solutions.

Here I feel it necessary to insert a detailed clinical example of the process of geneogram construction in order to illustrate its complexities. In the following transcript I have eliminated extraneous material but have kept the temporal order of all the interactions between the family members, the diagram and myself. This was the first family therapy session of the Slater family. They were referred to me after the identified patient had been discharged from an in-patient unit following her refusal to co-operate with the treatment offered to her. The geneogram was used to build the family structure in front of the family on a blackboard, involving all of them in the process. The initial tone of the session was one of anger and frustration. The family members felt that the psychiatric services had rejected them and that their referral to me was one of measured desperation.

Diagrams of the geneogram being constructed have been placed at appropriate intervals within the transcript in order to show its build up throughout the session.

Therapist
I know that you have been admitted to hospital with a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa but you were unable to keep to the regimen and your discharge caused a great deal of discomfort among your family. I look at things from a family point of view so you might find things strange at first. I'd like you each to tell me how this illness is a problem for you.
Angry silence).
Brother (George)
Someone has to say something!
Father (Richard)
Our problems don't necessarily arise out of Doreen's illness. There were problems simmering beneath the surface before that surfaced, erupted and then went back again.

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Therapist
Sometimes problems get buried and come back in different ways.
Father
That's right. It was unfortunate that when Doreen first developed this I had trouble at work and the frustration was taken home. There were lots of changes. I coped with them but I snapped their heads off at home.
Therapist
Can I interrupt for a second. I like to draw diagrams of the families I see on the blackboard. How old are you Doreen? (See Figure 4.5)
Sister
(Doreen)
Twenty-two
Therapist
How old are you? What's your name?
Brother
George
Therapist
Who were you named after?
Father
He was named something else but we found they didn't like it in Ireland.
Therapist
What was that?
Father
Named Patrick but apparently that's a Catholic name so we changed it.
Therapist
Your name is?
Mother
Jillian Victoria.
Therapist
And your age?
Mother
Fifty-eight.
Therapist
And you are...?
Father
Richard Arthur and I'm fifty-two.
Therapist
So you are six years older than your husband. George, did you know that you were named Patrick?
Brother
Yes. But I've never been called it. I have two birth certificates.
Therapist
Different years?
Father
No. You can change the name within three months.
Therapist
I didn't know that. And when were you two born?
Brother
2 October 1955.
Sister
8 May 1952

Figure 4.5 The Process of Geneogram Construction, I

Figure 4.5 The Process of Geneogram Construction, I
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Therapist
Now we were talking about...
Father
How I brought short-temperedness home with me. It's always been a family trait, but the three of us have it in a different form than Mick.
Therapist
Which three? Mick? Who's Mick?

(Laughter)

Father
That's the name she's called. That's the Irish part of her.
Mother
Don't you write that down.
Therapist
And you are not Irish?
Father
No. I'm English. I flare and forget. She flares and then she sulks for days.
Sister
If there's a feud she will go away to her bedroom and sulk. But we'll sit and fume in the sitting room.
Father
But we tend to forget afterwards. Mick at times will bring things back that have happened in the past next time she flares.
Brother
I'm surprised she can remember them.
Therapist
I've suddenly realised looking at you in the office and looking at your family geneogram on the board how isolated it looks. There are just the four of you. Is that actually true? (See Figure 4.6).
Father
Well, I mean, let's face it, I have a sister, one sister.
Mother
Oh dear. You want to put all that down. There won't be room on the board for my side.
Father
I have one sister and one nephew.
Therapist
One sister who is married and has a son.
Father
My nephew is married and has two daughters. The only other relatives I have are two cousins, one in Canada and one who lives in Hastings.
Mother
And you never see any of them.
Therapist
Your parents are dead?
Father
Yes. My family were never close unlike Mick's side which is close knit.
Therapist
Are your family in Ireland or over here? (See Figure 4.7)
Mother
They are all over the world but mostly in Ireland.
Therapist
So you are cut off.
Father
Yes, she's the odd one out. That of course has a bearing on our problems, must have.
Mother
Yes, and more so now because until these last few years I used to go regularly every year, but since The Troubles over there I can't bear to go there. It's awful. I know I ought to go because my father is elderly and I want to see him.

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<All of page 77 taken up with figures 4.6 and 4.7 one above another, portrait>

Figure 4.6 The Process of Geneogram Construction, II

Figure 4.6 The Process of Geneogram Construction, II

Figure 4.7 The Process of Geneogram Construction, III

Figure 4.7 The Process of Geneogram Construction, III
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Therapist
How about your mother? Is she still alive?
Mother
No. She died thirteen years ago. But the way things are over there, I look at The Troubles in a different way than them and it causes friction. I've lived in England most of my life since the war so I look at it from an English point of view. My sister came over with me to join up but she got married instead.
Therapist
Is that when the two of you met?
Mother
Yes. We met at a dance. He was passing through on the way to Africa.
Father
It became a competition. All the blokes were after her and they were on permanent staff and I was in a transient unit. She was very popular.
Therapist
Why was that?
Father
She was good looking, a good figure and all.
Mother
Compliments are flying aren't they?
Father
She was a good dancer. She was good fun, and very sociable in those days.
Mother
See what you have done to me. Look at me now!
Therapist
You tend to do it to each other, don't you? That's the trouble with marriage; it ruins great romances.
Mother
It does. It should be abolished.
Therapist
We're kind of talking about and around sex really. How has that side of your relationship gone? Its not the kind of thing you like to talk about in front of children. I don't want to spread out the lurid details but I'm wondering if you two were ever content with the physical side of it.
Mother
You mean since we were married?
Therapist
Or before.
Mother
Oh not before - there wasn't any physical relationship before, only petting and kissing.
Therapist
But you never had sexual intercourse before you were married?

(Silence)

Mother
Oh come on. You may as well be honest, if we are going to bring that up at all. I wouldn't let him.
Therapist
You mean he tried.
Mother
Definitely. You might as well be honest.
Father
Well if we're going to be honest let's be honest. I was pretty pushy back then and I got what I wanted.

Brother
I can't imagine him every feeling that way. I accept that he probably did but I can't imagine it.

<end of page 78>
Therapist
So you don't come across that way to George.
Father
No. I think I come across on the cold side to them. I'm emotional inside but I strain to control it. It comes out most when I'm angry.
Therapist
But it doesn't come out in other ways like sadness, love or those soft feelings?
Father
They can answer that better than I can. Doreen can twist me around her little finger.
Brother
He's tougher with me.
Mother
You get everything you want, too.
Therapist
How about you?
Mother
Oh I don't get anything. I don't. I've stopped asking.

(Laughter all round)

Therapist
Does that include sexual relations?
Father
We stopped it. She didn't want it so we stopped. Three years ago around the time of Doreen's illness. Since Mick had the change of life.
Therapist
So your periods stopped three years ago and Doreen's never started?
Sister
Mine started and then they stopped when my mother stopped.
Therapist
So you are going through the menopause with your mother?

(Roars of laughter)

Doreen
I don't get hot flushes or anything.
Therapist
So your relationship must have changed in some way three years ago. Before that did you enjoy your relationship?
Mother
Its not something you want to discuss before your family is it?
Therapist
No. I'm not saying you should. But what I would like to do is get the two of you on your own so we can explore the effects of this change away from the children.
Brother
I object to being called a child.
Therapist
Well you are a child to them aren't you?
Father
No.
Sister
Of course he is.
Mother
Oh, he is.
Brother
Because they are used to treating me as a child they still treat me as a child in many respects, but when I go away to University I'm treated as an adult.
Mother
You ask to be treated like a child sometimes. All children

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do until they get married and go away.

Therapist
Is that what it was like with you? (See Figure 4.8)
Mother
Yes. The Paisleys were like that. My parents never interfered after I married.
Therapist
And who is the dominant one of you two?
Father
She has to be dominant.
Therapist
Yes, I should have guessed that because that's the way the sexual side has gone as well.
Father
She comes from a matriarchal family and has continued to exercise that.
Therapist
Did you know that when you married?
Mother
No, well he didn't know it until it was too late.
Therapist
So there are two big areas of conflict between you two with the kids trapped in between. First is the sexual conflict and the second is who controls the family. If you both come from different families, brought up in different ways...
Mother
Yes, his father was just like him. My sister is the only one who lets her husband run the family.
Therapist
Does being like his father turn you off of him? I mean is that one of the reasons you're not able to be close together?
Mother
No
Therapist
Does he turn you off?
Mother
Completely!
Therapist
Is it that you don't like him any more or are not in love with him any more.
Mother
Yes, I'm afraid that is it. It's no use beating about the bush saying I do if I don't, is there? I suppose my feelings have just gradually worked off over the years.
Therapist
You have just fallen out of love with him?
Mother
I don't even like him, I hate him - no I don't wish him harm, I don't hate him.
Father
She has hated me for thirteen years!
Therapist
That would be back in 1961. What happened back then other than your mother dying?
Father
Ah yes, but something happened before her mother died that caused it. She had an affair with another man and I turned to someone else myself.
Mother
Richard had another woman and he wanted to divorce me and take the children as well.
Therapist
I see. Did you know about this?
Brother
Yes, but it is only recently that we've been told.

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Sister
I felt before that there had been something like that. I wasn't surprised. I didn't worry, and I don't think George thought about it, he was out of the house.
Therapist
But you two stayed together.
Mother
Well, he wanted a divorce and he wanted the children and I knew that he couldn't have the children so I took them and went to Ireland for a change and I was there for four weeks when my mother died from a heart attack. And then Richard came over for the funeral and he asked me to come back and promised that things would be different.

Figure 4.8 The Process of Geneogram Construction, IV

Figure 4.8 The Process of Geneogram Construction, IV
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Therapist
So here is one of the fundamental arguments.
Father
I feel that I fulfilled my part of the bargain, that I have but she has not. She has never forgiven me and never will.
Therapist
You two don't have a very good model for marriage do you?
Sister
But I have to live with it. No wonder I've been depressed almost all my life.
Brother
But we don't have to follow that model do we?
Sister
But I can't get out. I mean I'm stuck. I've got nowhere to go. He's alright. He's at University so he's well out of it but if I leave I don't know what will happen to them.
Therapist
Even if you leave you won't stop your way of thinking about them.
Mother
What can we do about it?
Father
She'll have to learn to live with it until she conquers this emotional bond she has to live with.
Therapist
Which bond? (See Figure 4.9)
Father
The bond which makes you worry even if you weren't there. I've been through it with my parents. My sister opted out. She was at nursing school and she got married and opted out completely. And I was stuck at home.
Mother
Well, of course we lived with them for five years after we were married and they were always fighting and...
Father
I was always there and even when we were on our own I still had this worry, this emotional conflict over the fight that went on at home between my mother and my father and my sister...
Therapist
Are you the younger brother?
Father
Yes. My sister is the same age as my wife. And when my mother died, my father lived for some years afterwards. You would never know that they argued because as far as he was concerned the only things that existed were the happy times and I wondered then why I fought and battled with them both to keep them together.
Therapist
Its terrible what parents do to their children, isn't it?
Mother
It is. I don't think people should have any more.
Sister
No children, no world.
Therapist
If you didn't have Doreen or if she starves herself to death then you could split?
Father
You are assuming that we want to split. She might want to split but I don't.
Mother
That's what we're trying to avoid. Doreen starving to death. As for me leaving where would I go?

<end of page 82>
Doreen
They can't agree on anything.
Therapist
It seems to me that families are composed of different units and it sounds as if your marital, your parent unit is the major problem and that you are both reacting in different ways, opposing ways to the quandary you're in.
Mother
You're right. That's exactly it.
Therapist
And Doreen and George are doing the same thing that you and your sister did with your parents.
Father
You see, even when my mother died there was conflict between me and my father and my sister over the Will and the possessions.
Therapist
When did she die, your Mom?
Mother
Twenty-three years ago wasn't it?
Brother
1951.
Therapist
So Doreen wasn't born then.
Father
Doreen was conceived after my mother died because my wife wanted to start a family then.
Mother
I don't remember that.
Father
Well, its true. It was your choice.
Therapist
Rather than his?
Mother
I wouldn't say rather than his. It was one of the few joint things we made.
Therapist
See that. No wonder you're stuck. No wonder you can't opt out. How about George? Was he planned?
Mother
He was planned. He didn't just happen.
Brother
I'm surprised.
Father
Ten years after we were married she had him planned. We lost one between Doreen and George, at three months.
Therapist
I didn't know that. How did that affect you?
Mother
Well, don't forget that the first six years of our married life we lived in two rooms in his father's house and that was a very unhappy time for me.
Therapist
How did you get on with his father?
Mother
Very, very badly. In fact, for years he never spoke to me and I used to take pills for my stomach all the years we stayed in that house. I felt that Richard was happy there with his father and mother and he didn't want to move. He had everything and even though it was affecting my health he wouldn't do anything about it.
Therapist
When were you married?
Father
1945, in August.
Mother
So in fact we have a very bad start right from the beginning.

<end of page 83>

Figure 4.9 The Process of Geneogram Construction, V

Figure 4.9 The Process of Geneogram Construction, V
Therapist
Well, time is moving on and I think we'll have to stop there. I want to see the two of you alone next time. I don't know if you have learned anything new today about your parents but if you can...
Father
They must have. They said they didn't know she was good looking.
Therapist
...If you can go away at least remembering that the family quandary has to do with them and not with you I think you'll have gained something.

<end of page 84>
Brother
I think we dimly realised that before we came.
Therapist
Yes, well maybe none of the other doctors spelled it out. As I see it Doreen has to learn to be able to opt out more while you two have to come to some sort of resolution, and you need someone else to do it because you've been at it for several decades without doing it on your own.
Mother
What will happen to your lovely little picture now. You'll have to rub it out, won't you?
Therapist
No, I'm going to copy it down on to paper. I'm afraid we haven't spent any time on anorexia. But it didn't seem as important.
Mother
No, we haven't, have we?
Sister
Thank God.

In the process of building the geneogram in front of the Slater family several simultaneous aims were achieved. The anger and tension present at the beginning of the session were replaced by a feeling of involvement and engagement. I was able to concentrate on the family's development and history instead of being drawn into a sterile discussion about the treatment of anorexia nervosa. There was a stimulation of shared emotional closeness between all the family members and in that sharing some of the secrecy in the family between the two generations was breached. Most important the family quandary was separated from the individual illness. The family quandary involved fundamental and long-lasting conflicts between Mr. and Mrs. Slater which were themselves based in the influences from previous generations. Their marriage incorporated the socio-cultural differences between the Irish and the English. The individual family cultures added a matriarchal versus patriarchal conflict to the family collision when they were married. The death of Mr. Slater's mother was followed by her replacement through the conception and birth of their daughter. The death of Mrs. Slater's mother occurred in the midst of the dissolution of their marriage. Mr. Slater ended his affair and rushed back to his family but the damage was done. Mrs. Slater blamed her husband for her mother's death and she lost all feeling for him gradually over the remaining years. Yet her loss of feeling was only part of the picture since she needed her husband as a person whom she could continuously hold responsible for her mother's death. She continued sexual relations with her husband until her menopause. Her daughter was unhappy but trapped at home. She was very sensitive to the tension at home but unlike her brother she could not leave. The illness she developed was an individual response to the tension. By the end of the session
<end of page 85>
the illness was placed in a proper perspective. Mr. and Mrs. Slater were later seen in joint marital sessions and their daughter returned for several conjoint sessions. She gained weight although remaining below her target weight and became much less sensitive to her parents' arguments. She eventually moved away from home in pursuit of her own career as a dress designer.

I have attempted to describe the way in which the geneogram construction process combined history-taking with the interactions between family members and therapist throughout the session. It is this process and its exploitation as a tool which opens the way to the analysis of a family quandary and the planning of therapeutic tasks and techniques which aim at the resolution of the quandary.

The Need for Detail

There are requirements for enquiring into fine details in a geneogram which arise from four major therapeutic purposes. The first of these purposes is to distinguish fact from fantasy accurately and clearly in order to establish the life history of a family. The structural skeleton of the family provided by the geneogram must be combined with a chronological skeleton, a 'life chart' of the important events in family life.

One of the shortcomings of the human memory is its inability to record dates infallibly and order events in their correct time sequence. Full names, ages, dates of birth, adoption, separation, divorce, marriage, and death are all chronological landmarks to a family whose members each argue the case for the accuracy of their recall of detail. The exact dates can be determined through the use of corroborative accounts from the various family members interviewed together or separately. Written corroboration is often available from documents such as birth certificates which families store but to which they seldom refer. Chronological landmarks can settle fractious and divisive arguments about fact. These arguments are used by family members in the family sessions to avoid painful emotional issues. Comparison of previously-held but erroneous beliefs about the chronology of family life events given access to painfully felt emotion and conflicts between family members which seemed to originate in arguments over fact. The establishment of chronological framework provides the skeleton upon which the muscle of powerful fantasies may be successfully explored.

The second purpose for detailed enquiry relates to the natural avoidance of emotional displays by family members. By encouraging families to bring to the surface their painful feelings, such as anger, sorrow, jealousy, mistrust or hatred, and unload them in the family therapy sess-
<end of page 86>
ions without first having established a framework of events to which these feelings have been attached, a therapist may feel stranded in an unknown swamp and may sink in the resulting quagmire of emotions as a result. But if the therapist sinks, so too does the family. Most families, if given the chance, will avoid the expression of painful or unpleasant feelings. This avoidance can also engulf the therapist. A detailed enquiry into the family's developmental history will allow a controlled exploration of those events which arouse strong feelings. The empathic therapist will already be alerted to those areas of avoidance before the emotions crest like a tsunami to pour into the session in an uncontrolled and destructive form.

There is an example of this ability to control and direct the display of emotions in the Slater transcript. The death of Mrs. Slater's mother was an area which I sensed would be emotionally explosive. I postponed exploration but later returned to it. It was at that point in the interview that the pent-up feelings of anger and sadness which were present in much of the session were finally connected with the course of events which seemed to have precipitated them. The family members were by then aware that I would continue drawing the geneogram and that there was no point in 'beating about the bush'. The controlled result of this detailed enquiry eventually provided the entire family with an understanding that the marital subsystem required help and was the major cause of the family quandary.

The third purpose of detailed enquiry comes in dealing with the continuum of secrecy within a family. I have often encountered the truth about premarital pregnancies, affairs, abortions, adoptions, and other, more terrible secret material during the process of neutral but direct enquiry about exact dates, numbers of pregnancies, medical histories or legal involvements. Since these secrets are not known by all family members present in conjoint sessions, unresolved conflicting statements, professed ignorance, or embarrassed silence may be the first indication that there is a secret present. Geneograms may actually have to be done separately with suspect family members if it is clear that certain detailed information has been deliberately withheld in a conjoint session. It is important to note the vague feelings of disquiet or reluctant eye contact that occur when detailed enquiry is poised on the threshold of an area of secrecy. One family which I visited at home chose such moments to bring out the tea and biscuits.

Finally, a detailed enquiry serves the purpose of thorough exploration of the family culture and the connection of collision of family cultures to the family quandary. The family usually appears in the session
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presenting a quandary which is unconnected to the manner in which the family's culture has conveyed the family to their present dilemma. Often, no illness in the family surfaced directly from their quandary; instead it appeared like Athena, born full-grown from the head of Zeus (that Zeus swallowed his mother whole who then delivered her within him carries this metaphor to its logical conclusion).

The connection of the quandary to the family culture is illustrated in the family which was referred with a ten-year-old boy with a travel phobia. His father seemed puzzlingly over-protective and treated his robust son as a delicate and precious specimen. Father's first statement that he himself was an only child had been accepted until in a later geneogram session he revealed that his mother lost four previous children by miscarriage or stillbirth. He was very precious to his parents and was treated as such. This pattern of child-rearing was brought by him into his marriage and conveyed to his child despite the very altered circumstances of the family.

The Geneogram as a Tool

The geneogram is a tool which provides both overt and covert uses. Any tool requires knowledge, skill and practice before it can be used to its best potential. Knowledge and skill can come with practice but as any amateur do-it-yourself craftsman can testify, the initial results may not seem worth the effort. The geneogram is a tool whose uses increase with practice. The therapist who has gained skill in its use may find it a therapeutic method in itself.

The first open use of the geneogram is to enable a therapist to systematically take a history in a thorough and neutral (non-partisan) manner within the family session. Traditionally doctors have relied heavily on history-taking as providing 75 per cent of the necessary information required for diagnostic purposes. There is no reason to suppose that this contribution should be any less in exploring and diagnosing a family quandary. In this history-taking process the therapist questions the family members about their names, siblings, parents, dates of birth and son on, all of which are recorded. The information gathered builds a family tree while nodal points of family additions and losses are noted, and any areas of conflict or missing information are explored further. As a history-taking tool the geneogram is as useful as the therapist employing it is skilful.

The history-taking process logically extends to use of the geneogram as an educational aid. The family must be apprised of the basic premise of family therapy; that the family is an organism. To family members
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labelled with an individual illness such as depression, agoraphobia or frigidity, this concept is an alien one which must be taught. The interlinked structure of a geneogram provides a lucid illustration of the family organism. The family educational process can then proceed to the transgenerational model of the family organism possessing the fourth dimension of time. Repetitive patterns which are visible in the geneogram structure from generation to generation can illustrate this point. In fact, most of the concepts applying to family therapy can be usefully taught to families using the geneogram which has been drawn on a blackboard in front of the family during the session.

One further overt use of the geneogram as a tool is seen in its ability to pick out solutions to the family quandary based on similar solutions which have come to light through the exploration of extended family patterns. Many of the quandaries which have brought a particular family to therapy have been encountered and mastered in parts of the extended family without professional guidance. The geneogram is used to explore the diversity of extended family repertoires. A client family will see the solution to their quandary as much more natural if it has been planned on the model existing within their own family's experience. Blueprints for change in the client family are planned with them and gain their acceptance more readily if the change required is one which they already experienced vicariously in their uncle's nuclear family or in the nuclear family of one of their cousins.

The uses of the geneogram already mentioned can combine to provide a self-contained therapeutic method in and of itself. The following example illustrates this use on an individual patient.

Mrs. Lewis was referred suffering from unremitting bouts of depression following a second marriage. Crying spells, sleep disturbance and loss of appetite were accompanied by suicidal feelings and a lack of trust in her second husband. Sexual relations with her husband had become totally unsatisfactory. The marital couple were in a spiralling cycle of mutual rejection.

The first session proceeded from a quick review of the present symptoms into the drawing of a geneogram (Figure 4.10). For three generations in Mrs. Lewis's family most of her female relations had been unable to maintain stable marriages. Her mother had been divorced no less than five times. Mrs. Lewis had been especially unhappy while discussing her mother's many marriages and divorces. She felt that her mother was an incompetent woman who needed men to help structure her life, yet couldn't live with them once she had them. Her maternal grandmother, in contrast, had divorced her husband and never remarried,
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preferring to remain independent. Her grandmother had proved her resourcefulness. Mrs. Lewis has been raised by her grandmother at times and by her mother at other times during her childhood. She was presented with two conflicting models of motherhood and relationships between men and women. Mrs. Lewis was able to realise that she had made a poor marital choice in her first marriage and had developed her symptoms because of her worry about having made another bad match, confirming her fears of being like her mother rather than her grandmother.

The awareness of her transgenerational input was catalysed by the process of creating a geneogram. She realised that she was the product of familial patterns of poor marital choice and relationships. She further realised that her symptoms grew out of the conflict of her early moulding: whether to emulate grandmother, independent and resourceful without a need for men, or whether to follow her mother's path, inadequate and dependently bonded to men in short unhappy conflictual relationships. Her own desire was to fulfil a woman's role of sexual and family life. This desire conflicted with her craving for independence. At this point in the interview she suddenly recalled that her symptoms had begun when, after two months of marriage, her husband had reneged on
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their agreement to have children soon after marriage. The development of her symptoms made sense to her in that her anger at her husband was caught up in her own conflict about her need for a man upon whom to be dependent as opposed to her need to be independent. Her lack of trust in her new husband was translated by her into a lack of trust in her own abilities, her self-esteem was greatly lowered and her symptoms developed. The session concluded with her own conscious decision to attempt to merge the best of her mother and grandmother as models. She became more independent from her husband and he reacted by feeling less threatened by her and drawing closer. Their marital and sexual life improved during the following month so that by her return appointment her symptoms had disappeared. At her one-year follow-up appointment she remained happily married without further difficulties.

In this example the geneogram served as a treatment method on its own. History-taking is not ordinarily a substitute for treatment. But when awareness and insight gained from the exploration of the past leads directly to family members changing their behaviour towards their family, the exploration is the treatment. The geneogram is an excellent way of systematically providing increased awareness of family influences upon family members. The meanings which are inherent in the family patterns are readily perceived by family members without the need to provide extensive theoretical explanation. If in each of three or four generations marital disharmony has been the rule then, as in the case of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, it is not surprising to find the same quandary developing in the present relationship. Mrs. Lewis was fortunate in having been moulded in two differing ways so that her insight could lead to a spontaneous and conscious process of integrating her two models, changing her behaviour and relieving the family quandary.

This overt use of the geneogram is a limited one. There are those families whose members understand the meaning of their family background, realise the transgenerational patterns that influence their interactions, yet cannot alter their relationship rules. In fact, the knowledge of repetitive and destructive family patterns can lead families to fatalistically accept the unchanging nature of their quandary. The therapist is then placed in the position of providing cassandraic insights which further entrench the family in their pathology. In these families the use of the geneogram must be to change the present through the understanding the therapist gains of the family. The geneogram enables the therapist to plan tasks and changes in relationship in order to alter previously inflexible family positions.
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So far the uses of the geneogram have been described as those which are open and straightforward. But there are covert experiential elements in the use of the geneogram. The first and most obvious is the introduction of the geneogram as a task which involves the entire family. The family members are provided with their first experience of task-setting as well as being required to work together and involve themselves in a common enterprise. This experience may be the first time in many weeks, months or years that a fragmented family share a common task. While briefly working together they may prove the feasibility (if only temporarily) of a new way of relating.

Engaging the family in a common task is less traumatic when the sensible and legitimate task is that of helping inform a stranger about the intricacies of the family's origins and structure. The family work together in order to give an account of their quandary and its historical background and in so doing become engaged in the therapeutic process.

While using the geneogram I became aware of another covert use to which it can be applied. The geneogram eases family members unknowingly into the discussion and experiencing of deeply felt emotions. Some of these emotions were being consciously withheld while others were not known to be present until memories were stimulated by the systematic geneogram construction. For example when the Dudley family were being seen in a session, Mr. Dudley was describing the death of his firstborn daughter with little emotion. Mrs. Dudley reacted angrily and chastised him for his lack of reaction. Neither of them had shared their feelings in relation to the tragic death of their daughter and Mr. Dudley in turn became angry. In his anger he disclosed to the family the fact that he had been attending a spiritualist in attempts to contact their daughter. He began to sob uncontrollably as the memory returned to him. The emotions which are stimulated are shared amongst other family members present in a context that makes sense to them because of the manner in which the feelings are linked to the original events which stimulated them.

The neutralisation of destructive conflicts is another feature of the covert use of geneograms, for it is temporarily able to concentrate the attention of antagonists on to common ground. This use was put into play several times in the Slater interview, when the parents were combining in their hostility towards their daughter and when their anger towards each other was threatening to break through in a destructive way.

Neutralisation of conflict and the stimulation of emotion which is then shared have led to the covert use of the geneogram as a method of
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bridging the intergenerational gap between family members. The construction of the geneogram allows the family members of the older generation to expose their lives in a new way to the scrutiny of the younger generation and vice versa. Through relating the experiences, anxieties and fantasies which were present in their own youth, the older generation create new conditions of relating to their children and grandchildren. Empathy is increased and a bridge of understanding can be established which will hopefully widen into a highway of mutually shared emotional links. For example, when Mrs. Burgoyne had finally managed to cajole her mother into a therapy session she was apprehensive about her mother's hostility. Mrs. Burgoyne had suffered from years of bitterness between herself and her mother in reaction to her premarital pregnancy. When her mother told of her own premarital pregnancy and subsequent forced marriage the years of bitterness were temporarily forgotten in a wave of mutually felt and shared emotion. These intergenerational bridges can become key elements in the planning of further therapeutic moves towards change.

Since the geneogram can be used to provide a breathing space for the family members and the therapist, it can be used by the therapist as a way of distancing the immediate engulfing emotional climate before it becomes too great a burden. For the therapist who works alone there are times when it is essential to have a method of easing his own anxiety. A geneogram used in this way must be judiciously applied. Searching for past causes in order to avoid present emotions, and with no prospect of future changes, is history-taking for the therapist, not the family. Similarly an interminable analysis of the information obtained can help conceptualise the quandary of the family without making the solution less painful or less difficult. If survival in a particular family requires history-taking too often the therapist must look to his awareness of his problem with his own family in order to continue successful treatment of that family.

For example, a husband and wife were continually in conflict over their middle son who was caught stealing. I returned to the geneogram session after session until the family were obviously disconcerted with my obsession. I was aware of an emotional block in myself, while the sessions had taken on the indefinite quality of a Pinter play. At that point I carefully and consciously considered my own family structure and conflicts. The awareness of my similar position as a middle son whose adolescent thieving was a source of conflict for his parents at one time enabled me to feel and express my own emotions in the following session, and use my family's successful handling of the crisis in a con-
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structive way rather than continue unnecessary history-taking.

Summary

The geneogram is a formidable tool for use in the practice of family therapy. Its mechanical construction can be readily assimilated by professionals and family members alike. Its uses are broadly characterised as overt and covert. Overt uses include history-taking of both matters of fact and of feeling. The family can be educated into the basic premises of family therapy, transgenerational theory or other theories related to the family approach. The information acquired can be used by the therapist as a blueprint for change, and in some instances the geneogram construction can become a therapeutic technique in itself. Covert uses of the geneogram are experiential and include uses of benefit to the therapist and the family. The geneogram introduces family members to the task-setting process, engages family members in a common task, neutralises conflicts and stimulates emotional sharing. It allows the building of new bridges between family members.

Finally it can be used as a means of keeping the therapist from being engulfed by the emotions of the family. Care must be exercised so that the geneogram is not employed by the therapist to avoid facing the issues of change in therapy, rather than aiding these issues.

Note

1. S. Lieberman, 'Transgenerational Analysis: The Geneogram as a Technique in Family Therapy', Journal of Family Therapy, vol. 1 (February 1979);
P.J. Guerin and E.G. Pendagast, 'Evaluation of Family System and Geneogram', in P.J. Guerin (ed). Family Therapy (Gardner Press, New York, 1976), pp. 450-64.

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