Causative Factors In Family Patterns Of Addiction
Member: AAIMH, Brian J. Hunt, Psychotherapist, Private Practice
Address: 3/6 Scott Street , Bronte 2024 NSW Australia
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This paper will be concerned with a historical reflection on the origin and development of regressive disorders and their relationship to patterns of relatedness within families.
The family is seen here not only to be the essential matrix from which broader socialization develops but also as an entity that experiences itself as reactive to the whole social structure.
The family (father mother child) structures the acts of separation and joining. It is the essential microcosm that begins with the primary triadic relationship that develops and transforms through intra action to interaction with larger social structures which are both the container and the modifier of family life.
In this paper I will attempt to describe the ways in which social dynamics transform the families idea of itself through adaptations to necessity that 'pathologize' its structure so that its capacity to contain and enhance the maturation of the individual family members is seriously diminished. This is a description of regressive disorders manifested in socio-political dynamics that suggest primary faults in the holding environment that pose a threat to the mental health of mothers, fathers and babies.