"Aquilo que não se exprime, se imprime."
Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger

Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger, a French psychologist, developed a method based on various transgenerational studies, which she began to explore in depth in the 1950s while she was in the United States.

The issue of unconscious psychic transmissions between generations had been understood to a certain extent by Jung, among others, but it was Anne Ancelin who, starting from Josephine Hilgard’s statistical studies on family repetitions, combining the systemic theory of the Palo Alto school and Boszomenyi-Nagy’s analyses on invisible loyalties, was able to synthesise and propose a theoretical and practical model.

Anne Ancelin proposes Henry Colomb’s genosociogram as a therapeutic tool that combines Edgar Moreno’s genogram and sociometry with Bert Hellinger’s graphic representation of the family constellation with its disorders and problems.

The work with the genosociogram or psychogenealogical tree is called psychogenealogy.

According to this method, traumas, secrets and conflicts experienced in a dramatic way can affect descendants through transgenerational transmission, who may become carriers of disorders, illnesses or strange and inexplicable behaviours. By increasing awareness of these transmissions, they help to break free from repetitions.

The objectives of psychogenealogy are:

The psychogenealogical model works on several levels simultaneously:

He also distinguishes between:

Everything happens as if everything that cannot be forgotten is passed on from generation to generation. As if one could not forget an event in life, as if one could not forget, but also could not talk about it, passing it on in silence. Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger

Clinical practice
The psychogenealogy proposed by Anne Ancelin is a work of observation and synthesis in collaboration with the client in the Rogerian sense: there is no illness, so the patient/client is on the same level as the therapist who seeks solutions with them.

The approach must be centred on the other person, on verbal and non-verbal communication, on the indirect expression of feelings and sensations through body language, posture, gestures, breathing rhythm, occupation of space, micro muscle tensions, etc. The therapist must be able to pick up on all the significant signals that help them formulate hypotheses and ask relevant questions that can help the person in their family memory work.

Psychogenealogy work begins with a session in which the person talks about themselves by drawing their family tree with important events in the lives of family members: marriages, births, departures, moves, divorces, separations, deaths, etc.

Through this practice, Anne Ancelin has shown that highlighting a past family trauma and talking about it allows it to come out of its crypt and, although it is often not enough to change one’s life or health, it helps and is a first step towards improvement.

Anne Ancelin spent many years accompanying terminally ill cancer patients and, as early as 1993, before the publication of her book My Ancestors, she had collected an archive of almost four hundred genosociograms.

“Throughout my life as a therapist, I have seen families reproduce illnesses, accidents or accidental deaths, one, two or even more generations without understanding why, like a mark on the body or an incision in time.”

Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger

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Jaqueline Cássia de Oliveira
Systemic family psychotherapist – Brazil
Psychogenealogist – Italy

SYSTEMIC PSYCHOGENEALOGY APPLIED

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