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| DURABLE
TRIANGLE SIMULATION |
|
| SOCIAL
LEVEL DATA - (the social story) |
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| FAMILY
- PART 1 |
 |
 |
| Father |
- |
Mike |
- |
Age
36 |
| Child |
- |
Kelly |
- |
Age
17 |
| Mother |
- |
Betty |
- |
Age
33 |
| Child |
- |
David |
- |
Age
15 |
DAD - Mike
has worked at an automotive parts house for 12 years and has
recently been promoted to manager. He is having some trouble
with the responsibility of supervising the other employees and
managing the parts house. He has recently been having angry
out-bursts, at home, at small infractions of the children's
reluctance to do their chores. He also has been hyper-critical
of his wife. Neither of these displays is characteristic of him,
he is usually quiet and withdrawn.
MOM
- Betty works part-time as a waitress. The money she earns
goes toward getting extra things for the children--such as new
clothes for school and presents for holidays and special
occasions. She suffers from migraines and sometimes has to call
in sick. She married Mike because he was strong and protective
but Mike has little patience with her migraines because he has
never missed a day of work in his life and Betty tends to
"complain about small stuff a lot anyway". When Mike
took Betty to the hospital--for the birth of their first born
Kelly--Mike couldn't stand the anxiety so he left and drove
around alone for 4 hours. When he came back Betty had delivered
but had very nearly lost the child.
CHILD
- Kelly--now in high school--is getting low grades and is a
discipline problem. Kelly has begun using drugs more and more
and has moved into using harder drugs and has begun to mix
alcohol with the drug usage. Kelly has been promised a job by a
friend's father at twice minimum wage, working at typesetting in
a print shop. Even though Kelly likes math and history, Kelly
desperately wants to quit school, get married, and go to work.
Although he knows Kelly has been involved 3 times with the
police for juvenile scrapes, the owner of the print shop has
faith in Kelly.
CHILD
- David may be described as a "model child". Never a
problem at home or at school. David gets good grades and takes
part in extra activities at school. David likes arts, crafts,
drama, and science and spends a lot of time at home
quietly doing projects in the bedroom. David even has a small
chemistry lab and likes to do special projects for extra credit
at school.
THE
PROBLEM - Push has finally come to shove--Kelly has been
reported for being drunk in class at school. Kelly's
juvenile officer has come by the house with Kelly in tow
and is talking to mother when father comes home. Dad has had to
fire an employee today for pilfering auto parts. Dad had to
answer to the regional office manager who chewed him out for not
keeping track of inventory better. Dad drove around for 2 hours
after work to ease the anxiety and dull the pain.
DURABLE
TRIANGLE SIMULATION |
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| PROCESS
LEVEL
DATA - (the secret story) |
 |
| FAMILY
- PART 2 |
 |
 |
| Father |
- |
Mike |
- |
Age
36 |
| Child |
- |
Kelly |
- |
Age
17 FEMALE |
| Mother |
- |
Betty |
- |
Age
33 |
| Child |
- |
David |
- |
Age
15 MALE |
DAD - Mike
was abandoned by his alcoholic father on a regular basis. Mike
had a big fight with his father at 14, left home and finished
high school living at a friend's home. When Mike got his first
job he proudly told his dad. His fathers only comment was
"You have more on the ball than that". Two days before
the birth of their first child Mike had visited his father in an
attempt to build a new tie with the coming birth of a
grandchild. Mike's father was drunk and told him he was not
interested in any grandchildren that he would have and besides
he had married a "damaged" woman who was beneath him.
Mike's recent work advancement is scaring him
"half-to-death." He is dyslexic, has been since
childhood, only diagnosed in high school, and only then did he
understand why school was so hard and unrewarding. It has always
been a secret. Only his own mother knows. Mike had trouble
making friends in grade school - the other kids called him
"dummy" and "stupid." He can't talk to Kelly
because of his shame and embarrassment about his own dyslexia.
He won't help David with his studies because he still can't read
well. He is alone, bonding with nobody. He is scared at work,
because as the new manager, he has to "deal with
people", and he has to "track the numbers" -- two
major problems for a dyslexic loner.
He decided now that
this has to stop. He went to his doctor and asked for help. He
was referred to a reading clinic for his dyslexia, and to family
therapy for the mess at home. He is afraid about what this all
means but is willing to start because "anything is better
than this misery."
MOM
- Betty , the oldest, had to care for her brothers and sisters
when her father died and her mother went to work as a waitress.
After mother remarried, Betty continued to be responsible for
the other children, with mother's encouragement, allowing mother
to have more time with her new husband. Betty was molested by
her stepfather and an uncle between 7 and 12 years of age. She
married to get away from home but is still fearful of men--even
though she married Mike because he is big, strong, and
protective. Mike has now turned out to be cold, critical and
possessive. She wants to go to junior college to study
secretarial courses to better herself, but she keeps spending
the money on the children to "give them what I never
had". Being a waitress is OK because she is "in
charge" and likes serving people, and going to school and
being a student is fearful for her. Although her husband is not
emotionally supportive of her and refuses to talk about his
feelings, she feels that he is basically a good man and that
they can get along "OK."
Betty
decided to join Mike for family/couple therapy. She was told
that both She and Mike need to begin talking about their
feelings in a number of areas. She said that she was
"shy" but agreed with Mike that the current situation
must stop -- "It is too painful for the whole family."
CHILD
- Kelly, angry depressed, laid awake nights worried about what
life holds for her. She can't turn to her parents. Her mothers
migraines make her unavailable, and her father "just won't
talk to me" Kelly feels hopeless to change things. Kelly
was born with a mild form of dyslexia and part of the school
problem is traceable to this problem of seeing letters inverted
and/or backwards. Only recently diagnosed, it has been an
unknown source of frustration for Kelly. Kelly was frequently
told by father that "You're dumb, stupid".
Kelly--"the
one who got us here"--is still very angry, and withdrawn.
She says that therapy is "dumb and stupid" (of course)
and that she doesn't want any part of it -- but continues to
come, without major objection -- to the family sessions.
CHILD
- David is suicidal, and, unlike Kelly, David decided to
"keep the nose to the grindstone" and ignore the
family hassles. As the years rolled by David became better and
better at hiding feelings. David now has two lives--a social
facade of success, accomplishment, and sociability--and a
private life internally which is preoccupied with occasional
thoughts of suicide. At 15 David is having great trouble dealing
with the demands of growing sexuality, and the social demands of
getting along with peers but not having a decent model of how to
deal with feelings. With nobody to confide in at home, David is
feeling "wound up like a spring". David has a secret
diary in which he has developed several methods of suicide, how
he would make that happen, and how each of his family members
would feel about his death.
David
brightly contributed to the family therapy with what he had
learned on the internet about psychology, dyslexia, family
dynamics, and has several ideas how to "fix" the other
members of the family. He has great difficulty answering simple,
direct questions about himself: "How did you feel when your
father would not help you with your homework?" After 6
months of family therapy he finally produced his suicide journal
for all to see and talk about, including himself. The family
stayed in various forms of therapy (individual, couple, family)
for over 22 months.
Betty,
now, requires Mike and herself to regularly talk about feelings,
self-esteem, and needs.
Mike, now, is not embarrassed when he concentrates to do "figures" at work - everybody knows.
Kelly, now, is "clean" and working at the print plant,
and mastering dyslexia with dad helping.
David, now, is not suicidal, and is now interested in
"brain-chemistry and serotonin-uptake"
______________________________________________________________________________
LOVE
IS EFFORT OVER TIME
GOOD
ENOUGH IS GOOD ENOUGH
______________________________________________________________________________
–
END EXAMPLES –
– EXERCISE BELOW
–
Write down a few
brief reactions to these questions.
SOCIAL
LEVEL - (the social story)
1. What emotions did I feel in general about reading the social
level information?
2. Did I have any preconceived reactions to the social
information?
3. Did I have any prejudice one way or another about the social
information?
4. Did I have more sympathy for one person over another?
5. Did I fix blame and/or take sides about the issues?
PROCESS
LEVEL - (the secret story)
1. What emotions did I feel in general about reading the process
level information?
2. Did I have any preconceived reactions to the process
information?
3. Did I have any prejudice one way or another about the process
information?
4. Did I have more sympathy for one person over another?
5. Did I fix blame and/or take sides about the issues?
NOW - AFTER
THINKING ABOUT BOTH
THE SOCIAL AND PROCESS LEVEL INFORMATION
1. Did it make a
difference in your understanding after reading both parts?
2. If it made a difference, will that effect your thinking and
reaction to others now?
3. Do you know people in you personal and professional life that
you now will see differently?
– END EXERCISE
–
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