Satir - Humanistic System Theory
Satir - Humanistic System Theory
Satir - Humanistic System Theory
HUMANISTIC-SYSTEMIC
FOUNDATION
BACKGROUND
Was a very bright child with an explosive sense of curiosity. She taught
herself how to read at the age of three, and recalled wanting to become a
detective when she was very young
Chicago, through private practice (1951) and joining the Illinois State
Psychiatric Institute (1955) where she set up training programs for
resident students of family therapy
BACKGROUND
After working with thousands of families, she reported she still found a
In 1959, joined the MRI (Mental Research Institute) & served as director of training and
The Beautiful People in 1969 (later registered as the International Human Learning Resources Network)
The AVANTA Network (Virginia Satir Global Network) in 1978 to connect practitioners of the model
She used experiential exercises, such as sculpting, metaphors, coaching, and the self of the
2. All people possess the resources (they are good, unique, make meaning internally) for
positive growth (humanistic principle)
3. Every person and every thing or situation impacts and is impacted by everyone and
everything else, but choose familiarity over comfort during stress (systemic principle)
4. Therapy is a process that involves interaction between therapist and client; in this
relationship, each person is responsible for him/herself (systemic and humanistic
principle)
NATURE OF PEOPLE
• Satir had a positive view of human nature
important
• Behavior is directly related to one’s family position
2. Families are systems and as such seek balance; when that balance is maintained through
inappropriate roles, restrictive rules, and/or unrealistic expectations, the members’ needs
will not be met, and dysfunction will occur.
3. The result of dysfunctional family systems is low self-esteem and defensive behavior, as
the basic drive of human beings is to enhance self-esteem and defend against threats to it.
4. Each person contains all the resources one needs for growth and healthy functioning.
5. The therapist and his or her beliefs are the most important tools at his or her command.
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
their own families, blending it both consciously and unconsciously to form the context of
their current family
Family unit becomes dysfunctional when members do not understand the rules
The present family (of procreation) as being unduly influenced by past generations and as
having significant influence on the present family’s attitude, behaviors, family structure,
hierarchy, power, and balance
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Families as Systems
As a system, family has components, consist of:
A purpose or goal: to grow new people
An order to the part’s working: various family member’s self-esteem, rules, and communication
Power to maintain energy in the system so the parts can work: derived from food, shelter, activity, beliefs
about the emotional, intellectual, physical, social, and spiritual lives, how they work together
Ways of interacting w/ the outside: relating to changing contents
Each component is essential and related to each other to attain a balance, has an order and a
sequence
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Families as Systems
Two types of system:
Closed (rigidly connected or disconnected altogether)
Often times there are unrealistic expectations within families (e.g., unrealistic marital
Self-Esteem/Self-Worth
The ability to value one’s self and to treat oneself w/ dignity, love, and the aspects of which he/she is
ashamed of acceptance of one’s strength/ that individual values and weaknesses/ which she/he
ashamed of
A person w/ a low SE having a great sense of anxiety and uncertainty about himself tend to be
more concerned w/ what others think of them and less concerned w/ how they feel about themselves
Since the level of self-worth or SE impacts communication of the individual it will also play a
significant role in family communication and hence family behavior, and the coping stances that may
be taken by the individual
Self-Esteem/Self-Worth
Include the capacity for learning, changing, awareness, compassion, rationality, wisdom, hope, self-
acceptance and the acceptance of others, esteem, making good choices, being cooperative, admitting and
correcting mistakes, asking for what one needs, and having courage to take action
circumstances
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
communicated and the nonjudgmental qualities of the therapist’s responses are essential
provide new models of communication to the family
Congruency Incongruence
Obtained by the matching of the verbal (overt) verbal and (covert) nonverbal messages do not match
(overt) message with the nonverbal (covert) exhibited by subtle external discrepancies and changes in voice
message tone, posture, facial expression, skin coloration, respiration and
gesture.
Entails using words that accurately reflect
and match one’s feelings and experiences Contradictory messages are sent via different levels (e.g., verbal
the reality of one’s real feelings from oneself and from others.
THE SURVIVAL STANCES
1. The placator
Hides his or her feelings of low self-worth and vulnerability by
attempting to please others because his or her emotional survival
depends on it
Engages in apologetic, tentative, and self-effacing communication
that is designed to please others, tries to avoid rejection
Serving as a mediator between family members in family disputes
their interest in the mediation attempts is to assuage his or her
own feelings of low self-esteem and self-worth by gaining the
acceptance of other family members
Block important communication attempts between members and
thus serve to inhibit open communication
THE SURVIVAL STANCES
2. The blamer
Hides their feelings of low self-worth and vulnerability by
attempting to control others and by disagreeing indiscriminately
giving a sense of importance
Engages in fault finding, name calling, and criticism as if the
blamer cannot feel good or secure about him- or herself without
placing other family members in the “one down” position
Often establishing dishonest communication
A father rules a family (and his wife) with an iron fist, seldom
yielding (or even considering) the opinions or feelings of other
family members
THE SURVIVAL STANCES
3. The super-reasonable
Hides their own feelings by attempting to anesthetize and insulate
him or herself from his or her true feelings.
Their response to family communication, especially family conflict,
is often an intellectual or overly rational one -- bypassing the
(emotional) inner self
Conveys noninvolvement and control—inner feelings are
downplayed or avoided altogether, encouraging other family
members to do the same
The impact on family communication: impeding open and honest
communication between family members
Not much positive communication and considerable open conflict
hide feelings of low self-worth and contempt for his parents—even
from siblings
THE SURVIVAL STANCES
4. The Irrelevant
Handles family conflict and stress by pretending it is not there
Internally the irrelevant stance taker feels uncared for and alienated from
the family attempts to refocus family communication elsewhere from
the present context or topic under discussion and away from inner
feelings
Engage in tangential or even totally irrelevant verbalizations that serve to
refocus attention away from the topic at hand
The impact on family communication can be one of incomplete
communication, wherein important dialogue is not fully explored
THE SURVIVAL STANCES
5. The Congruent
Holds equal balance in the circle of self, others, and context.
Their communication has no contradictions between its layers. Senders
do not consciously or unconsciously expect the receiver to make
inferences about what they did not say, or to perceive contradictions
between verbal and non-verbal messages
Share their thoughts and emotions about themselves without projecting
them onto others and thus avoid manipulation
High self-worth and congruence are the main "indicators of more fully
functioning human beings.“
FAMILY FUNCTIONING
Family described as an interacting unit that strives to balance in relationships
through the use of repetitious, circular, and predictable communication patterns
Four components in family situation are subject to change and correction:
The member’s feeling of self-worth
The family communication abilities
The system
The rules of the family
Primary goal of the family therapist is to deal w/ family pain
A pained marital relationship is likely to result in dysfunctional parenting
patterns
Symptoms viewed as having a role in the emotional function of family system
Because people fear rejection, they resort to one response pattern or a combination
of patterns
FAMILY FUNCTIONING
Family rules & roles
Family rules and roles saw as a transgenerational issue: rules from one’s family of origin are
patterns & styles, family rituals & routines, career choices, etc.
Healthy, functional, and adaptive family rules : clear, flexible, and adaptive to the
environment, and changing developmental needs of the family and its member
Dysfunctional rules: rigidly enforced, autocratically developed, and everlasting
Possible roles: the martyr, the victim or helpless one, the rescuer, the good child/parent, the bad child/parent
FAMILY FUNCTIONING
Family dynamics
Problematic family dynamics identified arise from:
Power struggles: within the family; couple or with extended family members
Parental conflicts: disagreeing about how to parent & care for children
Lack of validation: family openly expresses little emotional support or validation
Lack of intimacy: minimal sharing of significant personal information and emotional
life
FAMILY FUNCTIONING
Survival triads
The child, mother, and father – and the quality of the relationship between all three
Serve as a nurturing system for the child
Victims, persecutors, saviors?
Mother Father
FAMILY FUNCTIONING
Functional family Dysfunctional family
Having clear, complete, congruent Rules are fixed, rigid, arbitrary, and inconsistently applied
communication in which there are clear roles tend to maintain the status quo and may serve to bolster
and rules to govern family processes the self-esteem of the parents over the children and/or one
spouse’s self-esteem over the other’s.
Family rules are few in number, relevant,
A “closed system” rigidly connected or disconnected
flexible, developmentally appropriate, and
altogether; information doesn’t flow between parts or from
consistently applied
inside in and inside out
An “open system” the parts interconnect, are Family problems as in effect an inability to cope
responsive and sensitive to one another, and problems are not the problem; coping as the problem, &
allow information to flow between the internal coping is the outcome of self-worth, rules of family systems,
and external environments. and links to the outside world
THERAPY
Her therapeutic approach called as the Human Validation Process Model
As the natural extension of her philosophical beliefs about process of change and that all individuals
have within them all the resources that they need to grow, change, and solve problems
Major focus: helping individual family members feel good about themselves
tool
Emphasizing the use of warmth, charismatic, empathy, and (seemingly) intuitive
the family), a role model to the family (for good communication), a mediator (to
help families with communication impasses), and a teacher and educator (to help
the family see new solutions for old problems and view new ways of coping with
problems).
The expertise does not lie in the elaborateness of their tools and techniques; but in
the skill and wisdom of their knowing how to use the simple tools
TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES
Satir’s tools:
Sculpting
Parts party
Etc.
(play video)
SATIR’S TECHNIQUE
1. Describe difficult situation
4. Each family members takes some rope and ties it to each others waists
5. Role play
emulate