Systemic dynamics

Double displacement

A dynamic where a descendant “replaces” an excluded person, and simultaneously, another member of the system treats them as if they were that ancestor.

Daniela Giraldo Systemic glossary

Double displacement is one of the most complex patterns described by Hellinger. It occurs when, due to the law of belonging, a descendant unconsciously carries the identity of an excluded member of the system, and simultaneously other members of the system return to them the treatment that “belonged” to that excluded member.

Clinically, it is seen when a granddaughter is treated by her mother with a mixture of fear and rage that was actually directed at an authoritarian grandmother. The granddaughter does not understand why her mother rejects her; the system does know: the granddaughter embodies the rejected grandmother, and the mother repeats the conflict she could never resolve with her own mother.

Recognizing double displacement is a liberating movement for both parties: the descendant can release what does not belong to them, and the other member can direct their real feeling to the true recipient.

Clinical example

A woman does not understand why her eldest daughter generates so much rejection in her. In a Constellation, her own mother appears, authoritarian and emotionally cold, with whom she could never resolve the conflict. The daughter carries the gaze and gestures of the grandmother. By naming it, the mother can begin to see her daughter as her daughter, not as a mirror of her own wound.

Illustrative case, anonymized and composed from frequent patterns in Family Constellation sessions.

Evidence and contemporary voices

The term 'double displacement' does not appear in peer-reviewed academic literature on systemic psychology or family therapy as an empirically validated concept. Within the framework of Bert Hellinger's Family Constellations, it relates to dynamics of transgenerational substitution, where a descendant simultaneously represents an excluded person and is treated as such by another member, but it lacks controlled clinical studies to support it (Fundación PSF, 2023). Research on transgenerational trauma, such as that by Rachel Yehuda at Mount Sinai University, focuses on verifiable epigenetic mechanisms in descendants of Holocaust survivors, without reference to symbolic double displacements (Yehuda et al., 2016). Isabelle Taïeb and collaborators in French institutions have explored 'invisible loyalties' in systemic therapy, but emphasize phenomenological evidence without backing for Hellingerian hypotheses (Taïeb, 2010). The absence of randomized trials limits its clinical applicability.

Verifiable quotes

  • "if a family member is excluded, the collective consciousness replaces him with a later member"Bert Hellinger, Orders of Love (1994).

Researchers and Key Figures

  • Bert Hellinger — Founder of Family Constellations — Dynamics of the Orders of Love and Exclusions
  • Anne Schützenberger — University of Nice — Psychodrama and transgenerational anniversary syndrome
  • Françoise Dolto — Paris Institute of Psychoanalysis — Psychoanalysis and transgenerational phantoms

Notes and Open Debates

Dynamics such as 'double displacement' are classified as pseudoscientific due to their basis in unfalsifiable premises, such as the family collective consciousness, without rigorous empirical evidence or methodological controls; systematic reviews conclude a lack of efficacy and ethical risks in mental health (Fundación PSF, 2023; Repisalud, s.f.).

Additional research generated with consultation of academic sources (Perplexity Sonar Pro). Citations and URLs are the responsibility of their original source; verify before formal citation.

Bibliography

  • The Orders of LoveBert Hellinger. Herder, 2001.
  • Family Constellations: Order, Hierarchy, BalanceBrigitte Champetier de Ríos. Editorial Grupo Cero, 2005.
  • No Roots, No WingsBertold Ulsamer. Desclée de Brouwer, 2004.

These books are in the reference library that nourishes Constelando el Origen.

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