Well said Josh. Thx
Liz Jelinek, PhD
On Jun 8, 2017, at 10:51 AM, Joshua Alexander egomagickian@xxxxxxxxx
[ConstellationTalk] <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Liz, thanks for bringing this up. The conversation generated has been very
useful to me.
Re your original question, "whether or not to use this topic with a group of
newcomers," I think that depends on two things: 1) you and the stance you are
able to hold with it, 2) how important you think it will be to have
experienced reps to cleanly and clearly hold the roles.
Re #1, I think this is where Leslie's comments were really great. If you feel
comfortable holding a topic like this for the group then great. It sounds
like you have a lot of training and experience and so have probably done a
lot of looking at your own system around this kind of topic as well as many
others. For facilitators who don't have that background, doing this kind of
self-check could be critical.
I do think it's important to be able to bring topics like this to groups and
hold them in nonjudgmental, matter-of-fact ways. It's exactly because there's
so much stigma around them that people want and need us (consciously or
otherwise) to offer spaces where sensitive topics can be dealt with
compassionately and effectively.
Thanks again for bringing this topic to this group.
Warmly,
Josh
On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 6:37 PM, Liz Jelinek lizjelinek@xxxxxxxxxxx
[ConstellationTalk] ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Well then it’s good it got clarified because that was never the situation.
In fact quite the contrary as is true in many families with huge systemic
traumas the lines of communication are often badly broken. He doesn’t know
why she isn’t talking to him or what he allegedly did to upset her—and she
is refusing to tell anyone—even her mother whom the daughter claims is a
saint!
The issue was that she was furious with dad. And the fury directed at dad
broke through his protective layer and he found those buried feelings and
all I was asking about was whether or not to use this topic with a group of
newcomers. A couple of you got it but alas I guess I wasn’t clear. The good
news is that it stimulated a great deal of discussion on a very touchy
topic, And one we in the allegedly civilized world don’t want to admit
exists.
Liz Jelinek, PhD
On Jun 7, 2017, at 9:20 PM, Laure Porché laure.porche@xxxxxxxxx
[ConstellationTalk] <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Liz, I was also confused by your original post: if he hasn't shared his
feelings with his daughter, why is she furious with him? I thought it was a
result of him saying it to her. I think that's what Logan was responding
to.
Blessings,
Laure
On Jun 7, 2017 19:21, "Liz Jelinek lizjelinek@xxxxxxxxxxx
[ConstellationTalk]" <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
My goodness Logan, the transcript I shared was from the workshop on Trauma
given by one of the earliest facilitators who studied directly with
Hellinger in the early days. Berthold was also one of my earliest teachers
as most of my training f was in Germany and other parts of Europe. So this
transcript is NOT to be confused with a conversation a real father has with
his real daughter, but rather was transcribed from a constellation that
Berthold Ulsamer set up for one of the attendees at the two part training—a
week in December followed by a week in May. This may not even have been an
actual piece of personal work that someone asked to do but it could very
well have been a demonstration of how to handle a difficult situation in a
constellations setting—we were facilitators seeking advanced training in
trauma from him.
No one is inferring, and certainly not me, that I have my client say these
things to his real daughter! You’re quite right that would be a violation.
But if these difficult topics cannot be addressed using representatives to
gain insight into what might have taken place or to reconcile the situation
which is what happens in the post of Berthold’s work. In the same manner as
we would return mother’s fate to her, the person to whom it rightfully
belongs, so the father admitted his feelings, and that he also had feelings
towards his mother, but he separated and said to daughter—I leave you with
what is yours and I take with me what is mine {in this case the sexual
attraction} and thereby reconciles the guilt—whether the guilt is over an
actual event or merely the guilty thoughts.
Liz Jelinek, PhD
On Jun 7, 2017, at 6:48 PM, Logan Sparks sparksrl@xxxxxxxxx
[ConstellationTalk] <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello,
My name is Logan. I am a facilitator in Albuquerque, NM (and also very
mobile). I know many of you in this group. So it is nice to see your names
and comments popping up in my inbox.
If you don't mind me jumping on in this thread, I noticed that it seemed
that the father, in this case, admitted his feelings of sexual attraction
towards his daugher, verbally. After that, it seems, there was a
discussion about whether he commited any violations of his daughter after
that, that he may not consciously remember.
To be frank, telling your child that you desire her sexually is already a
violation. The daughter stepping away would be a very natural response.
In systemic work, I feel that we are used to high levels of disclosure and
maybe we don't always think about these elements of what is best kept
silet, and out of the field of a child who cannot and should not carry the
burden of a parent's sexuality. Hellinger has said that often it is best
for a person who has cheated to keep the guilt to him or herself rather
than telling the partner. The reason being that this puts systemic
pressure on the non-cheating partner as they must then respond, forgive,
etc...thus somehow placing responsibility with them, rather than where
responsibility rests.
This is not meant to at all be crtical of the wonderful work being done in
this case (most likely the situation was previous to the constellatino, I
am guessing) but just something important that I want to share. I have
seen this dynamic a few times, and there is also a value for
non-disclosure as a way of respecting the place of a child in the system.
In much of the constellation work I have done, and seen others do, I am
very aware that many people still do not fully see the child int he
child's place, something particularly rife in western culture and in the
U.S. where children are often sexualized. I have seen that facilitators,
for example, helping me to work with my parents, unconsciously seem to
think that, as a child, my representative should be doing the right things
in order to make the parents love him. With others it is the same. There
is a pressure for the child to surrender to the parents etc...in a way
that sort of assumes that I am increasingly seeing how not engaging in
this way leads to resolutions that may be slower, but go deeper, with the
child finding his or her place more naturally and truly in healthy order,
rather than holding a tense space on behalf of a client and a group of
adults that have been gathered together to fix something.
Guarind this sacred child-space seems to work real miracles.
Thank you,
Logan