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Marriage and Family
Family Systems Rules, Rituals and Myths | Family Systems Rules, Rituals and Myths |
| Written by Franco E. Santos | |
| Friday, 21 March 2008 | |
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The power of rules, rituals and myths in binding the culture together is so strong that it is no surprise that in times of war each battling side attempts to eradicate them from the other side's consciousness. Without them, the conquered culture loses its sense of commonality and oneness and are, therefore, easier to subjugate. By imposing the conqueror's own rules, rituals and myths on the conquered ensures the conquered's loyalty towards their conqueror. The needs of the members of a family system, however, changes with time and as a result of its members' natural emotional, physical and psychological growth -- for example, the couple become parents, they have a child who grows up to be a toddler, another child is born, the children grows up to be adolescents, then teenager, etc. These changing needs threaten the family system's homeostasis -- its state of relative comfort. Through feedback loops the family system addresses, controls and copes with the threats to homeostasis as they arise. Negative feedback loops allow the family to respond superficially by adopting first order changes that serve only to temporarily alleviate the threat to its homeostasis, but makes no commitment to permanent change. Positive feedback loops and second order changes, on the other hand, allow the family system to acquire a new level of homeostasis by adopting more long term and permanent solutions. Family rituals and rules at times can be mistaken for one or the other. "Be home by 6:45 p.m. and ready for dinner by 7:00 p.m. every night" can both be seen as a ritual -- it happens with regularity and with each member performing a specific function, e.g., mother cooking, sister setting up the table, brother clearing the table after meal, father takes out the trash, etc. -- and as a rule because it is conveyed as something that must be followed. Myths Just as there are family rules and rituals, most families have myths that are passed from one generation to another. These family myths oftentimes carry lessons for the younger generations to follow. Myths convey why one family is better than another family -- a member's heroism at time of war, excellence in school or sports, etc. The farther off in time from the actual event, the higher the likelihood that the family myth would take on a life of its own. Myths, therefore, can be factually true, based on truth by exaggerated, or completely made up. Just like rituals, family myths serve to unite the family system as members coalesce around and identify with a single (or a few) ancestor(s). Franco Espeleta Santos is a graduate student working on his Master of Arts degree in Psychology with emphasis on Marriage and Family Therapy. Visit his blog at FrancoSantos.com
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