DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILY
A 'dysfunctional family' is a family in which conflict, misbehavior and even abuse on the part of individual members of the family occur continually, leading other members to accommodate such actions. Children sometimes grow up in such families with the understanding that such an arrangement is normal. Dysfunctional families are most often a result of the alcoholism, substance abuse, or other addictions of parents, parents' untreated mental illnesses/defects or personality disorders, or the parents emulating their own dysfunctional parents and dysfunctional family experiences.
Dysfunctional family members have common symptoms and behavior patterns as a result of their common experiences within the family structure. This tends to reinforce the dysfunctional behavior, either through enabling or perpetuation. The family unit can be affected by a variety of factors.
According to Steven Farmer, the author of ''Adult Children of Abusive Parents'', [1] there are several symptoms of family dysfunction:
★ Denial (i.e. a refusal to acknowledge the alcoholism of a parent or child/teenager; ignoring complaints of sexual abuse)
★ Inconsistency and Unpredictability
★ Lack of empathy toward family members
★ Lack of clear boundaries (i.e. throwing away personal possessions that belong to others, inappropriate touching, etc.)
★ Role reversals ("parentifying" children)
★ "Closed family system" (a socially isolated family that discourages relationships with outsiders)
★ Mixed Messages
★ Extremes in conflict (either too much or too little fighting between family members)
Dr. Dan Neuharth, author of ''If You Had Controlling Parents'' also expounds on dysfunctional families. (He uses the terms "controlling parents", "unhealthy control" and "over control" throughout his book.) He cites eight signs of unhealthy parenting: [2]
★ Conditional love
★ Disrespect
★ Stifled speech (children not allowed to dissent or question authority)
★ Emotional intolerance (family members not allowed to express the "wrong" emotions)
★ Ridicule
★ "Dogmatic or chaotic parenting" (harsh and inflexible discipline)
★ "Denial of an Inner Life" (children are not allowed to develop their own value system)
★ Social dysfunction or isolation
Neuharth also lists eight different parenting styles which cause family dysfunction: [3]
★ Smothering (parents do not allow their children to maintain a separate identity)
★ Using (destructively narcissistic parents)
★ Abusing (parents who use physical, verbal, or sexual violence to dominate their children)
★ Chaotic (unstable parents who behave in a wildly inconsistent manner with their kids)
★ Perfectionist( parents who "fixate on order, prestige, power, and/or perfect appearances".)
★ Cultlike (parents who feel uncertain and "raise their children according to rigid rules and roles".)
★ Depriving (parents who control by withholding love, money, praise, attention, or anything else their child needs or wants.)
★ Childlike (parents who "parentify" their children. They tend to be needy and incompetent. Usually allow the other parent to abuse children.)
| Contents |
| Effects on children |
| See also |
| References |
Effects on children
Children growing up in a dysfunctional family have been known to adopt one or more of five basic roles:
★ "The Good Child" – a child who assumes the parental role.
★ "The Problem Child" – the child who is blamed for most problems in spite of being the only emotionally honest one in the family.
★ "The Caretaker" – the one who takes responsibility for the emotional well-being of the family.
★ "The Lost Child" – the inconspicuous, quiet one, whose needs are often ignored or hidden.
★ "The Mascot" – uses comedy to divert attention away from the increasingly dysfunctional family system.
They may also:
★ think only of themselves to make up the difference of their childhoods. They're still learning the balance of self-love
★ distrust others
★ have difficulty expressing emotions
★ have low self-esteem or have a poor self image
★ have difficulty forming healthy relationships with others
★ feel angry, anxious, depressed, isolated from others, or unlovable
★ perpetuate dysfunctional behaviors in their other relationships (especially their children)
★ lack the ability to be playful, or childlike, and may "grow up too fast"
See also
★ Adult Children of Alcoholics
★ Karpman Drama Triangle
★ Interpersonal Psychology
★ Harry Stack Sullivan
★ C Steiner: Scripts People Live. New York: Bantam, 1974
★ Howells, J.: Theory and Practice of Family Psychiatry. New York: Brunner/Mazel: 1968
★ Haley, J.: Strategies in Psychotherapy. New York: Grune and Stratton, 1963
★ Silverman, S.: The Victimizer: Recognition and Character. American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1975, 29, 14-25
★ National Association for Children of Alcoholics
References
1. Farmer, S.: "Adult Children of Abusive Parents", pgs. 19-34. Ballantine Books, 1989,
2. Neuharth, D.: "If You Had Controlling Parents: How to Make Peace With Your Past and Take Your Place In the World", pgs. 4-5 Quill Books, 2002
3. Neuharth, D.: "If You Had Controlling Parents: Making Peace With Your Past and Taking Your Place In the World", pgs. 14-15, Quill Books, 2002
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