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Family Therapy ConCepts and Methods


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iii


Family Therapy ConCepts and Methods


eLeVenth edItIon


Michael P. Nichols College of William and Mary


with Sean D. Davis Alliant International University


Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Hoboken Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montréal Toronto


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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Nichols, Michael P., author. Family therapy : concepts and methods / Michael P. Nichols, College of William and Mary with Sean D. Davis, Alliant International University. — Eleventh edition. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-13-382660-9 — ISBN 0-13-382660-0 1. Family psychotherapy. I. Davis, Sean D., author. II. Title. RC488.5.N53 2016 616.89’156—dc23 2015032118


10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1


Student Edition ISBN 10: 0-13-382660-0


ISBN 13: 978-0-13-382660-9


eText ISBN 10: 0-13-382681-3 ISBN 13: 978-0-13-382681-4


Package ISBN 10: 0-13-430074-2 ISBN 13: 978-0-13-430074-0


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v


The Stages of the Family Life Cycle xiii Major Events in the History of Family Therapy xv Foreword xxi Preface xxiii


PART One THE CONTEXT OF FAMILY THERAPY


Introduction The Foundations of Family Therapy 1 The Myth of the Hero 3 Psychotherapeutic Sanctuary 4 Family versus Individual Therapy 5 Thinking in Lines, Thinking in Circles 6 The Power of Family Therapy 6


1 The Evolution of Family Therapy 8 The Undeclared War 8


Small Group Dynamics 9 The Child Guidance Movement 11 Marriage Counseling 12


Research on Family Dynamics and the Etiology of Schizophrenia 13 Gregory Bateson—Palo Alto 13 Theodore Lidz—Yale 15 Lyman Wynne—National Institute of Mental Health 15 Role Theorists 16


From Research to Treatment: The Pioneers of Family Therapy 16 John Bell 16 Palo Alto 17 Murray Bowen 19 Nathan Ackerman 21 Carl Whitaker 21 Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy 22 Salvador Minuchin 22 Other Early Centers of Family Therapy 23


The Golden Age of Family Therapy 24 SUMMARY 25


ConTEnTS


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vi Contents


2 Basic Techniques of Family Therapy 27 Getting Started 27


The Initial Telephone Call 27 The First Interview 28 The Early Phase of Treatment 30 The Middle Phase of Treatment 32 Termination 33 Termination Checklist 34


Family Assessment 34 The Presenting Problem 34 Understanding the Referral Route 35 Identifying the Systemic Context 35 Stage of the Life Cycle 36 Family Structure 36 Communication 36 Drug and Alcohol Abuse 37 Domestic Violence and Sexual Abuse 37 Extramarital Affairs 37 Gender 38 Culture 38


The Ethical Dimension 39 The Marriage and Family Therapy License 42


Family Therapy with Specific Presenting Problems 42 Marital Violence 42 Sexual Abuse of Children 45


Working with Managed Care 46 Fee-for-Service Private Practice 48


SUMMARY 49


3 The Fundamental Concepts of Family Therapy 50 Cybernetics 51 Systems Theory 54


General Systems Theory 55 Social Constructionism 55


Constructivism 56 The Social Construction of Reality 56


Attachment Theory 57 The Working Concepts of Family Therapy 60


Interpersonal Context 60 Complementarity 60 Circular Causality 60 Triangles 61 Process/Content 62 Family Structure 62 Family Life Cycle 63


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Contents vii


Family Narratives 64 Gender 65 Culture 66


SUMMARY 67


PART TWO THE CLASSIC SCHOOLS OF FAMILY THERAPY


4 Bowen Family Systems Therapy 69 Sketches of Leading Figures 70 Theoretical Formulations 70


Differentiation of Self 71 Emotional Triangles 71 Multigenerational Emotional Processes 72 Emotional Cutoff 72 Societal Emotional Process 73


Family Dynamics 73 Normal Family Functioning 73 Development of Behavior Disorders 74


Mechanisms of Change 76 Goals of Therapy 76 Conditions for Behavior Change 77


Therapy 77 Assessment 77 Therapeutic Techniques 80


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 85 SUMMARY 87


5 Strategic Family Therapy 89 Sketches of Leading Figures 89 Theoretical Formulations 91 Family Dynamics 93


Normal Family Functioning 93 Development of Behavior Disorders 93


Mechanisms of Change 94 Goals of Therapy 95 Conditions for Behavior Change 95


Therapy 95 Assessment 95 Therapeutic Techniques 97


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 107 SUMMARY 109


6 Structural Family Therapy 111 Sketches of Leading Figures 112 Theoretical Formulations 112


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viii Contents


Family Dynamics 115 Normal Family Functioning 115 Development of Behavior Disorders 116


Mechanisms of Change 118 Goals of Therapy 118 Conditions for Behavior Change 118


Therapy 119 Assessment 119 Therapeutic Techniques 121


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 127 SUMMARY 129


7 Experiential Family Therapy 131 Sketches of Leading Figures 132 Theoretical Formulations 132 Family Dynamics 133


Normal Family Functioning 133 Development of Behavior Disorders 133


Mechanisms of Change 134 Goals of Therapy 134 Conditions for Behavior Change 135


Therapy 135 Assessment 135 Therapeutic Techniques 136


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 146 SUMMARY 147


8 Psychoanalytic Family Therapy 149 Sketches of Leading Figures 150 Theoretical Formulations 150


Freudian Drive Psychology 151 Self Psychology 152 Object Relations Theory 152


Family Dynamics 154 Normal Family Functioning 155 Development of Behavior Disorders 156


Mechanisms of Change 158 Goals of Therapy 158 Conditions for Behavior Change 159


Therapy 159 Assessment 159 Therapeutic Techniques 160


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 165 SUMMARY 166


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Contents ix


9 Cognitive-Behavioral Family Therapy 167 Sketches of Leading Figures 167 Theoretical Formulations 169 Family Dynamics 169


Normal Family Functioning 169 Development of Behavior Disorders 170


Mechanisms of Change 172 Goals of Therapy 172 Conditions for Behavior Change 172


Therapy 173 Behavioral Parent Training 173 Behavioral Couples Therapy 177 The Cognitive-Behavioral Approach to Family Therapy 180 Treatment of Sexual Dysfunction 184


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 185 SUMMARY 187


PART THRee RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN FAMILY THERAPY


10 Family Therapy in the Twenty-First Century 189 Challenges to Traditional Family Systems Models 189


Erosion of Boundaries 189 Postmodernism 190 The Feminist Critique 190 Feminist Family Therapy 191 Social Constructionism and the Narrative Revolution 194 Multiculturalism 195 Race 195 Poverty and Social Class 196 Gay and Lesbian Rights 197


New Frontiers 198 Advances in Neuroscience 198 Sex and the Internet 199 Spirituality and Religion 203


Tailoring Treatment to Populations and Problems 204 Single-Parent Families 205 African American Families 207 Gay and Lesbian Families 209 Home-Based Services 212 Psychoeducation and Schizophrenia 213 Medical Family Therapy 215 Relationship Enrichment Programs 215


SUMMARY 216


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x Contents


11 Solution-Focused Therapy 219 Sketches of Leading Figures 219 Theoretical Formulations 220 Family Dynamics 221


Normal Family Development 221 Development of Behavior Disorders 221


Mechanisms of Change 221 Goals of Therapy 222 Conditions for Behavior Change 222


Therapy 222 Assessment 222 Therapeutic Techniques 224 Taking a Break and Giving Feedback 232 Later Sessions 233 Interviewing Children 235


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 236 SUMMARY 237


12 narrative Therapy 239 Sketches of Leading Figures 240 Theoretical Formulations 240 Family Dynamics 242


Normal Family Development 242 Development of Behavior Disorders 242


Mechanisms of Change 243 Goals of Therapy 243 Conditions for Behavior Change 244


Therapy 245 Assessment 245 Therapeutic Techniques 246


Evaluating Therapy Theory and Results 254 SUMMARY 255


PART FOUR THE EVALUATION OF FAMILY THERAPY


13 Comparative Analysis 257 Theoretical Formulations 257


Families as Systems 257 Stability and Change 258 Process/Content 259 Monadic, Dyadic, and Triadic Models 259 Boundaries 260


Family Dynamics 261 Normal Family Development 261


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Contents xi


Development of Behavior Disorders 262 Inflexible Systems 262 Pathologic Triangles 263


Therapy 264 Assessment 264 Decisive Interventions 264


Integrative Models 268 Eclecticism 268 Selective Borrowing 268 Specially Designed Integrative Models 269


Integrative Problem-Centered Metaframeworks (IPCM) Therapy 269 The Narrative Solutions Approach 270 Integrative Couples Therapy 271 Dialectical Behaviorism 272 Other Integrative Models 273 Community Family Therapy 274


SUMMARY 275


14 Research on Family Intervention 276 Research and Practice: Worlds Apart 276 Methodological Issues in Studying the Effectiveness of Family Therapy 277 Research Findings on the Effectiveness of Family-Focused Interventions 279


Family Interventions for Childhood Problems 279 Family Interventions for Adult Disorders 281 Family Interventions for Relationship Difficulties 283


Family Therapy Process Research 284 Common Factors 285 The Therapeutic Alliance 285 Critical Change Events in Family Therapy 286


Future Directions 288


Appendix A Chapter-by-Chapter Recommended Readings 290


Appendix B Selected Readings in Family Therapy 296


Appendix C Glossary 298


References 305


Index 342


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xiii


Family Life-Cycle Stage emotional Process of Transition: Key Principles


Second-Order Changes in Family Status Required to Proceed Developmentally


Leaving home: single young adults


Accepting emotional and financial responsibility for self


a. Differentiation of self in relation to family of origin b. Development of intimate peer relationships c. Establishment of self in respect to work and financial


independence


The joining of families through marriage: the new couple


Commitment to new system


a. Formation of marital system b. Realignment of relationships with extended families


and friends to include spouse


Families with young children


Accepting new members into the system


a. Adjusting marital system to make space for children b. Joining in childrearing, financial and household tasks c. Realignment of relationships with extended family to


include parenting and grandparenting roles


Families with adolescents Increasing flexibility of family boundaries to permit children’s independence and grandparents’ frailties


a. Shifting of parent–child relationships to permit ado- lescent to move into and out of system


b. Refocus on midlife marital and career issues c. Beginning shift toward caring for older generation


Launching children and moving on


Accepting a multitude of exits from and entries into the family system


a. Renegotiation of marital system as a dyad b. Development of adult-to-adult relationships c. Realignment of relationships to include in-laws and


grandchildren d. Dealing with disabilities and death of parents (grand-


parents)


Families in later life Accepting the shifting generational roles


a. Maintaining own and/or couple functioning and interests in face of physiological decline: exploration of new familial and social role options


b. Support for more central role of middle generation c. Making room in the system for the wisdom and expe-


rience of the elderly, supporting the older generation without overfunctioning for them


d. Dealing with loss of spouse, siblings, and other peers and preparation for death


ThE STAgES oF ThE FAMIlY lIFE CYClE


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xv


Social and Political Context Development of Family Therapy


1945 F.D.R. dies, Truman becomes president World War II ends in Europe (May 8) and the


Pacific (August 14)


Bertalanffy presents general systems theory


1946 Juan Perón elected president of Argentina Bowen at Menninger Clinic Whitaker at Emory Macy Conference Bateson at Harvard


1947 India partitioned into India and Pakistan


1948 Truman reelected U.S. president State of Israel established


Whitaker begins conferences on schizophrenia


1949 Communist People’s Republic of China established


Bowlby: “The Study and Reduction of Group Tensions in the Family”


1950 North Korea invades South Korea Bateson begins work at Palo Alto V.A.


1951 Julius and Ethel Rosenberg sentenced to death for espionage


Sen. Estes Kefauver leads Senate probe into organized crime


Ruesch & Bateson: Communication: The Social Matrix of Society


Bowen initiates residential treatment of mothers and children


Lidz at Yale


1952 Eisenhower elected U.S. president Bateson receives Rockefeller grant to study communication in Palo Alto Wynne at NIMH


1953 Joseph Stalin dies Korean armistice signed


Whitaker & Malone: The Roots of Psychotherapy


1954 Supreme Court rules school segregation unconstitutional


Bateson project research on schizophrenic communication


Bowen at NIMH


1955 Rosa Parks refuses to move to the back of the bus; Martin Luther King, Jr., leads boycott in Montgomery, Alabama


Whitaker in private practice, Atlanta, Georgia. Satir begins teaching family dynamics in Chicago


1956 Nasser elected president of Egypt Soviet troops crush anti-Communist rebellion


in Hungary


Bateson, Jackson, Haley, & Weakland: “Toward a Theory of Schizophrenia”


Bowen at Georgetown


MAjoR EvEnTS In ThE hISToRY oF FAMIlY ThERAPY


(continued)


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xvi Major events in the History of Family Therapy


Social and Political Context Development of Family Therapy


1957 Russians launch Sputnik I Eisenhower sends troops to Little Rock,


Arkansas, to protect school integration


Jackson: “The Question of Family Homeostasis” Ackerman opens the Family Mental Health Clinic of


Jewish Family Services in New York Boszormenyi-Nagy opens Family Therapy


Department at EPPI in Philadelphia


1958 European Common Market established Ackerman: The Psychodynamics of Family Life


1959 Castro becomes premier of Cuba Charles de Gaulle becomes French president


MRI founded by Don Jackson


1960 Kennedy elected U.S. president Family Institute founded by Nathan Ackerman (renamed the Ackerman Institute in 1971)


Minuchin and colleagues begin doing family therapy at Wiltwyck


1961 Berlin Wall erected Bay of Pigs invasion


Bell: Family Group Therapy Family Process founded by Ackerman and Jackson


1962 Cuban Missile Crisis Bateson’s Palo Alto project ends Haley at MRI


1963 Kennedy assassinated Haley: Strategies of Psychotherapy


1964 Johnson elected U.S. president Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Martin Luther


King, Jr.


Satir: Conjoint Family Therapy Norbert Wiener dies (b. 1894)


1965 Passage of Medicare Malcolm X assassinated


Minuchin becomes director of Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic


Whitaker at University of Wisconsin


1966 Red Guards demonstrate in China Indira Gandhi becomes prime minister of


India


Brief Therapy Center at MRI begun under director- ship of Richard Fisch


Ackerman: Treating the Troubled Family


1967 Six-Day War between Israel and Arab states Urban riots in Cleveland, Newark, and Detroit


Watzlawick, Beavin, & Jackson: Pragmatics of Human Communication


Dicks: Marital Tensions


1968 Nixon elected U.S. president Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr.,


assassinated


Don Jackson dies (b. 1920) Satir at Esalen


1969 Widespread demonstrations against war in Vietnam


Bandura: Principles of Behavior Modification Wolpe: The Practice of Behavior Therapy


1970 Student protests against Vietnam War result in killing of four students at Kent State


Masters & Johnson: Human Sexual Inadequacy Laing & Esterson: Sanity, Madness and the Family


1971 Twenty-Sixth Amendment grants right to vote to 18-year-olds


Nathan Ackerman dies (b. 1908)


1972 Nixon reelected U.S. president Bateson: Steps to an Ecology of Mind Wynne at University of Rochester


1973 Supreme Court rules that states may not prohibit abortion


Energy crisis created by oil shortages


Center for Family Learning founded by Phil Guerin Boszormenyi-Nagy & Spark: Invisible Loyalties


1974 Nixon resigns Gerald Ford becomes 39th president


Minuchin: Families and Family Therapy Watzlawick, Weakland, & Fisch: Change


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Major events in the History of Family Therapy xvii


Social and Political Context Development of Family Therapy


1975 Vietnam War ends Mahler, Pine, & Bergman: The Psychological Birth of the Human Infant


Stuart: “Behavioral Remedies for Marital Ills”


1976 Carter elected U.S. president Haley: Problem-Solving Therapy Haley to Washington, D.C.


1977 President Carter pardons most Vietnam War draft evaders


Family Institute of Westchester founded by Betty Carter


American Family Therapy Academy (AFTA) estab- lished


1978 Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel


U.S. and People’s Republic of China establish diplomatic relations


Hare-Mustin: “A Feminist Approach to Family Therapy”


Selvini Palazzoli et al.: Paradox and Counterparadox


1979 England’s Margaret Thatcher becomes West’s first woman prime minister


Iranian militants seize U.S. Embassy in Tehran and hold hostages


Founding of Brief Therapy Center in Milwaukee Bateson: Mind and Nature


1980 Reagan elected U.S. president U.S. boycotts summer Olympic Games in


Moscow


Haley: Leaving Home Milton Erickson dies (b. 1901) Gregory Bateson dies (b. 1904)


1981 Sandra Day O’Connor becomes first woman justice of Supreme Court


Egyptian president Sadat assassinated


Hoffman: The Foundations of Family Therapy Madanes: Strategic Family Therapy Minuchin & Fishman: Family Therapy Techniques


1982 Equal Rights Amendment fails ratification Falklands war


Gilligan: In a Different Voice Fisch, Weakland, & Segal: Tactics of Change The Family Therapy Networker founded by Richard Simon


1983 U.S. invades Grenada Terrorist bombing of Marine headquarters in


Beirut


Doherty & Baird: Family Therapy and Family Medicine


Keeney: Aesthetics of Change


1984 Reagan reelected U.S. president U.S.S.R. boycotts summer Olympic Games in


Los Angeles


Watzlawick: The Invented Reality Madanes: Behind the One-Way Mirror


1985 Gorbachev becomes leader of U.S.S.R. de Shazer: Keys to Solution in Brief Therapy Gergen: “The Social Constructionist Movement in


Modern Psychology”


1986 Space shuttle Challenger explodes Anderson et al.: Schizophrenia and the Family Selvini Palazzoli: “Towards a General Model of


Psychotic Family Games”


1987 Congress investigates the Iran–Contra affair Tom Andersen: “The Reflecting Team” Guerin et al.: The Evaluation and Treatment of


Marital Conflict Scharff & Scharff: Object Relations Family Therapy


1988 George H. W. Bush elected U.S. president Kerr & Bowen: Family Evaluation Virginia Satir dies (b. 1916)


(continued)


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xviii Major events in the History of Family Therapy


Social and Political Context Development of Family Therapy


1989 The Berlin Wall comes down Boyd-Franklin: Black Families in Therapy


1990 Iraq invades Kuwait Murray Bowen dies (b. 1913) White & Epston: Narrative Means to Therapeutic


Ends


1991 Persian Gulf War against Iraq Harold Goolishian dies (b. 1924)


1992 Clinton elected U.S. president Family Institute of New Jersey founded by Monica McGoldrick


1993 Ethnic cleansing in Bosnia Los Angeles police officers convicted in


Rodney King beating


Israel Zwerling dies (b. 1917) Minuchin & Nichols: Family Healing


1994 Republicans win majority in Congress Nelson Mandela elected president of South


Africa


David and Jill Scharf leave Washington School of Psychiatry to begin the International Institute of Object Relations Therapy


1995 Oklahoma City federal building bombed Carl Whitaker dies (b. 1912) John Weakland dies (b. 1919) Salvador Minuchin retires Family Studies Inc. renamed The Minuchin Center


1996 Clinton reelected U.S. president Edwin Friedman dies (b. 1932) Eron & Lund: Narrative Solutions in Brief Therapy Freedman & Combs: Narrative Therapy


1997 Princess Diana dies in auto accident Hong Kong reverts to China


Michael Goldstein dies (b. 1930)


1998 President Clinton impeached by House of Representatives


Minuchin, Colapinto, & Minuchin: Working with Families of the Poor


1999 President Clinton acquitted in impeachment trial


Neil Jacobson dies (b. 1949) John Elderkin Bell dies (b. 1913) Mara Selvini Palazzoli dies (b. 1916)


2000 George W. Bush elected U.S. president Millennium Conference, Toronto, Canada


2001 September 11 terrorist attacks James Framo dies (b. 1922)


2002 Sex abuse scandal in Catholic Church Corporate corruption at Enron


Lipchik: Beyond Techniques in Solution-Focused Therapy


2003 U.S. invades Iraq Greenan & Tunnell: Couple Therapy with Gay Men


2004 George W. Bush reelected U.S. president Gianfranco Cecchin dies (b. 1932)


2005 Hurricane Katrina devastates New Orleans Steve de Shazer dies (b. 1940)


2006 Democrats regain control of U.S. House and Senate


Minuchin, Nichols, & Lee: Assessing Families and Couples


2007 Shootings at Virginia Tech Jay Haley dies (b. 1923) Lyman Wynne dies (b. 1923) Insoo Kim Berg dies (b. 1934) Albert Ellis dies (b. 1913) Thomas Fogarty dies (b. 1927)


2008 Barack Obama elected U.S. president Michael White dies (b. 1949)


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Major events in the History of Family Therapy xix


Social and Political Context Development of Family Therapy


2009 Worldwide economic recession Sprenkle, Davis, & Lebow: Common Factors in Couple and Family Therapy


2010 Earthquake in Haiti LaSala: Coming Out, Coming Home Dattilio: Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy with Couples


and Families


2011 Earthquake and tsunami in Japan Cose: The End of Anger


2012 Mass shootings in Newton CT Barack Obama reelected U.S. president


Betty Carter dies (b. 1929)


2013 Death of Nelson Mandela Affordable Healthcare Act


Alan Gurman dies (b. 1945)


2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa Donald Bloch dies (b. 1923)


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xxi


In this volume, Mike Nichols tells the story of family therapy—and tells it very well. It’s hard to imagine a more readable and informative guide to the field.


Born in the late 1950s, family therapy seemed to spring fully formed out of the heads of a group of seminal thinkers. Over six decades later, both theory and practice show the uncertainties and doubts that define maturity. But in the beginning—as the story- tellers say—there was Gregory Bateson on the West Coast, a tall, clean-shaven, angular intellectual, who saw families as systems, carriers of ideas. On the East Coast was Nathan Ackerman, short, bearded, portly, the quintessential charismatic healer, who saw fam- ilies as collections of individuals struggling to bal- ance feelings, irrationalities, and desires. Bateson and Ackerman complemented each other perfectly, the Don Quixote and Sancho Panza of the family systems revolution.


For all the diversity of the 1960s that saw the new clinical practice called family therapy take a variety of names—systemic, strategic, structural, Bowenian, experiential—there was also a remarkable solidarity in the shared beliefs that defined the field.


As family therapy succeeded and expanded, it was extended to encompass different client popula- tions, with specific interventions for various special groups—clients with drug addictions, hospitalized psychiatric patients, the welfare population, violent families, and so on. All posed their own complexities. Practitioners responded to this expanded family ther- apy with an array of new approaches, some of which even questioned the fundamental allegiance to sys- tems thinking.


The challenges to systems theory (the official sci- ence of the time) took two forms. One was purely the- oretical: a challenge to the assumption that systemic thinking was a universal framework, applicable to the


functioning of all human collectives. A major broad- side came from feminists who questioned the absence of concepts of gender and power in systems thinking and pointed to the distorting consequences of gender- less theory when focusing on family violence. The other challenge concerned the connection between theory and practice: a challenge to the imposition of systems theory as the basis for therapeutic practice. The very techniques that once defined the field were called into question. Inevitably, the field began to re- open for examination of its old taboos: the individual, intrapsychic life, emotions, biology, the past, and the particular place of the family in culture and society.


As is always characteristic of an official science, the field tried to preserve established concepts while a pragmatic attention to specific cases was demand- ing new and specific responses. As a result, today we have an official family therapy that claims direct de- scendance from Bateson and a multitude of excellent practitioners doing sensitive and effective work that is frequently quite different from what systems theory prescribes.


I see the therapeutic process as an encounter between distinct interpersonal cultures. Real respect for clients and their integrity can allow therapists to be other than fearfully cautious, can encourage them to be direct and authentic—respectful and compassionate— but also at times honest and challenging.


This conception of the therapist as an active knower—of himself or herself and of the different family members—is very different from the neutral therapist of the constructivists. But, of course, these two prototypes are entirely too simplified. Most prac- titioners fall somewhere between these two poles of neutrality and decisiveness.


The choice between action and interventionism, on the one hand, and meaning and conversation,


FoREwoRd


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xxii Foreword


on the other, is but one of the questions the field is grappling with today; there are many others. Are the norms of human behavior universal, or are they cultur- ally constructed products of political and ideological constraint? How do we become experts? How do we know what we know? Can we influence people? Can we not influence them? How do we know that we are not simply agents of social control? How do we know that we are accomplishing anything at all?


These questions and the rich history and contem- porary practice of family therapy are explored in Family Therapy: Concepts and Methods. It is a thor- ough and thoughtful, fair and balanced guide to the


ideas and techniques that make family therapy such an exciting enterprise. Dr. Nichols has managed to be comprehensive without becoming tedious. Per- haps the secret is the engaging style of his writing, or perhaps it is how he avoids getting lost in abstrac- tion while keeping a clear focus on clinical practice. In any case, this superb book has long set the standard of excellence as the best introduction and guide to the practice of family therapy.


Salvador Minuchin, M.D.


Boca Raton, Florida


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xxiii


PReFAce


One thing that sometimes gets lost in academic dis- cussions of family therapy is the feeling of accom- plishment that comes from sitting down with an unhappy family and being able to help them. Begin- ning therapists are understandably anxious and not sure they’ll know how to proceed. (“How do you get all of them to come in?”) Veterans often speak in abstractions. They have opinions and discuss big issues—postmodernism, managed care, second- order cybernetics. While it’s tempting to use this space to say Important Things, I prefer to be a little more per- sonal. Treating troubled families has given me the greatest satisfaction imaginable, and I hope that the same is or will be true for you.


New to This edition


In this eleventh edition of Family Therapy: Concepts and Methods, I’ve tried to describe the full scope of family therapy—its rich history, the classic schools, the latest developments—but with increasing empha- sis on clinical practice. There are a lot of changes in this edition:


New Digital Enhancements in the Pearson eText


♦ Videos: Links to video clips of therapists have been embedded for students to view throughout the chapters of the Pearson eText. Students are prompted to reflect on and analyze the videos via an accompanying question.


♦ Chapter Quizzes: At the end of each chapter Summary, students will find two self-assessments marked by a checkmark icon. In the Pearson eText,


they click on the icon and the quiz appears. The first one prompts them to test their knowledge of chapter concepts by taking a multiple-choice quiz.


The second quiz icon prompts them to apply their knowledge of chapter concepts by responding to open-ended questions by typing their response and submitting it for immediate feedback. These self- assessments can reinforce understanding of key chapter concepts and support application of newly learned content.


Content Changes in the New Edition


♦ New section on the impact of the Affordable Care Act ♦ Recommendations for establishing a fee-for- service


private practice ♦ Revised and expanded section on attachment


theory ♦ Questions to ask when doing a genogram ♦ More specific interventions from the MRI


approach ♦ Detailed guidelines for making a structural family


therapy assessment ♦ New section with guidelines on using family


sculpting ♦ More specific techniques used in object relations


family therapy ♦ Expanded section on spirituality and religion ♦ Expanded and updated section on families and


technology ♦ Guidelines for therapeutic letter writing ♦ New research chapter including a discussion of


why research has failed to influence practice and suggestions for bridging the research-practice gap


♦ New case studies


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xxiv Preface


Instructor Supplements


An instructor’s manual, test bank, and PowerPoint slides are available to accompany this text. They can be downloaded at www.pearsonhighered.com/educator.


Acknowledgments


Albert Einstein once said, “If you want to learn about physics, pay attention to what physicists do, not what they say they do.” When you read about therapy, it can be hard to see past the jargon and political packaging to the essential ideas and practices. So in preparing this edition, I’ve traveled widely to visit and observe actual sessions of the leading practitioners. I’ve also invited several master therapists to share some of their best case studies with you. The result is a more prag- matic, clinical focus. I hope you like it.


So many people have contributed to my develop- ment as a family therapist and to the writing of this book that it is impossible to thank them all. But I would like to single out a few. To the people who taught me family therapy—Lyman Wynne, Murray Bowen, and Salvador Minuchin—thank you. Some of the people


who went out of their way to help me prepare this eleventh edition were Yvonne Dolan, Jerome Price, Deborah Luepnitz, William Madsen, Frank Dattilio, Vicki Dickerson, Douglas Breunlin, and Salvador Minuchin. And I owe a huge debt of gratitude to Sean Davis for his extensive and thoughtful contributions to this edition. Sean has the rare combination of ac- ademic smarts and clinical sophistication that makes his perspective so valuable. To paraphrase John, Paul, George, and Ringo, I get by with a lot of help from my friends—and I thank them one and all. I am especially grateful to Julie Peters at Pearson for making a hard job easier.


Finally, I would like to thank my postgraduate instructors in family life: my wife, Melody, and my children, Sandy and Paul. In the brief span of forty-five years, Melody has seen me grow from a shy young man, totally ignorant of how to be a husband and father, to a shy middle-aged man, still bewildered and still trying. My children never cease to amaze me. If in my wildest dreams I had imagined children to love and be proud of, I wouldn’t even have come close to children as fine as Sandy and Paul.


M. P. N.


A01_NICH6609_11_SE_FM.indd 24 10/1/15 6:58 PM


1


I n t r o d u c t I o n


The FoundaTions oF Family Therapy Leaving Home


There wasn’t much information on the intake sheet. Just a name, Holly Roberts, the fact that she was a senior in college, and her presenting complaint: “trouble making decisions.”


The first thing Holly said when she sat down was, “I’m not sure I need to be here. You prob- ably have a lot of people who need help more than I do.” Then she started to cry.


It was springtime. The tulips were up, the trees were turning leafy green, and purple clumps of lilacs perfumed the air. Life and all its possibilities stretched out before her, but Holly was naggingly, unaccountably depressed.


The decision Holly was having trouble making was what to do after graduation. The more she tried to figure it out, the less able she was to concentrate. She started sleeping late, missing classes. Finally, her roommate talked her into going to the counseling center. “I wouldn’t have come,” Holly said. “I can take care of my own problems.”


I was into cathartic therapy back then. Most people have stories to tell and tears to shed. Some of the stories, I suspected, were dramatized to elicit sympathy. We seem to give ourselves permission to cry only with some very accept- able excuse. Of all the human emotions we’re ashamed of, feeling sorry for yourself tops the list.

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