Family Dysfunction - The Generation Effect - Chapter 2

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By BuiltClever Solutions | Wednesday, August 17, 2011, 11:08

It is generally acknowledged that behaviours are determined by feelings

and emotions; feelings and emotions are determined by thoughts. Thoughts

are determined by intrinsic and extrinsic factors; they can occur in

response to an immediate occurrence or experience; they can also emerge

from preconditioned responses to previous occurrences, specifically from

the pre-verbal and formative stages of childhood. These latter

responses are referred to as Schemas

and can also be formed during adulthood. Schemas occur as part of our

natural response mechanism to everyday experiences, and far from being

completely negative, they are the foundation building blocks of our

minds that allow us to make 'informed' decisions and reactions. They

become troublesome when the initial experiences have been traumatic in

some way, resulting in a pattern of behavioural responses that evolve as

maladaptive practices that affect everyday lives. Lack of support to core

needs, parental abuse, and even being 'spoilt' are all examples of the

conditioning that can instil negative schemas. The bearers of these

Schemata rarely realise what is occurring, as they become entrenched in a

repetitve cycle of emotional and behavioural responses that, to them,

appears quite 'normal' (although to others they are far from normal).

So it was with Terri and Steve, each having had difficult experiences in

their formative years and beyond that they now carried with them into

adulthood and ultimately their own relationship.

Steve's family history was paved with dysfunction. His father, one of

three children, had suffered the loss of their mother at an early age

and all three were consigned to a care home. When his father eventually

remarried, the new wife only wanted two of the three children, and

Steve's father was left behind. Thus early schemas were initiated in his

father by the trauma of abandonment, twice occurring at an early age.

He spent most of his adult life in the RAF - then a predominantly male

environment - and it is likely that this was a subconcious response to

his early experiences - being away from female presence was a maladptive

response to his abandonment as a child. Steve was born therefore of a

'dysfunctional' relationship between his own parents; his father was

away most of the time and he was the only male amongst a family of

females- his mother, two sisters and a Nan - so he spent most of his

youth in the sole company of women. Sadly, Steve's mother also died,

when he was twenty; ironically, with his father away, he had suffered a

similar 'abandonment' to his father's. Thus, the "Generation Effect" was

evolving and the concomitant dysfunction that followed suit was yet to

manifest in his own life. It soon would...

      

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