Enmeshment

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Enmeshment is a concept introduced by Salvador Minuchin to describe families where personal boundaries are diffused, sub-systems undifferentiated, and over-concern for others leads to a loss of autonomous development.[1] Enmeshed in parental needs, trapped in a discrepant role function,[2] a child may lose his or her capacity for self-direction;[3] his/her own distinctiveness, under the weight of psychic incest;[4] and, if family pressures increase, may end up becoming the identified patient or family scapegoat.[5] Enmeshment was also used by John Bradshaw to describe a state of cross-generational bonding within a family, whereby a child (normally of the opposite sex) becomes a surrogate spouse for their mother or father.[6]

The term is sometimes applied to engulfing codependent relationships,[7] where an unhealthy symbiosis is in existence.[8]

For the toxically enmeshed child, the adult's carried feelings may be the only ones they know, outweighing and eclipsing their own.[9]

Remedies

Clarifying boundaries, putting the generations in separate compartments,[10] and finding a better balance between involvement and separation,[11] are all useful remedies.

At the same time, it is important that the therapist avoids becoming enmeshed in the family subsystems themselves[12] - the unconscious enmeshment of helping therapist/needy client.[13]

See also

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References

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Further reading

  • Robin Skynner, One Flesh, Separate Persons (London 1976)

External links

  • H. & L. Goldberg, Family Therapy: An Overview (2008) p. 244 and p. 467
  • Virginia Satir, Peoplemaking (1983) p. 167
  • R. C. Schwartz, Internal Family Systems Therapy (1997) p. 162
  • Robert Bly, Iron John (1991) p. 170 and p. 185-7
  • Goldberg, p. 239
  • John Bradshaw, Reclaiming Virtue (2009) p. 390
  • Bradshaw, p. 272
  • R. Abell, Own Your Own Life (1977) p. 119-22
  • Terence Real, I Don't Want to Talk About It (1997) p. 206 and p. 360
  • R. Skynner/J. Cleese, Families and how to survive them (1993) p. 93 and p. 213
  • Goldenberg, p. 410
  • Skynner, p. 93
  • D. Sedgwick, Jung and Searles (1993) p. 113