The **vanishing twin syndrome** —*vanishing twin syndrome* in medical literature— refers to the spontaneous loss of one of the embryos in a multiple pregnancy, generally in the first trimester. Obstetric medicine has documented the phenomenon since the seventies, and the massive availability of ultrasounds has shown that it occurs in approximately **20-30% of initial multiple pregnancies** —a figure many descendants are unaware of because the loss occurred before their mother knew she was expecting twins—.
Psychogenealogy and the systemic approach document that the survivor carries deep imprints of this pre-natal loss: a chronic sense of fundamental loneliness even in loving company, a compulsive search for an 'other' or 'my other half' in relationships, a feeling of not being whole, an inexplicable attraction to twins in general, recurring dreams of a mirror-sibling, difficulty sustaining fused relationships without suffocating or distant relationships without feeling abandoned.
Recognizing a possible vanishing twin requires: inquiring if the mother had early bleeding in the pregnancy (a classic sign), if there was unexplained abdominal pain in the first trimester, if an early ultrasound showed 'something else' that later disappeared. Sometimes it is impossible to confirm medically, and one works with the open systemic hypothesis.
The healing movement is precise: naming the vanished twin (even if nameless, symbolically), acknowledging their existence and place, mourning the loss that the mother could not name, and authorizing the survivor to live 'whole' without the chronic search for the other: *"Brother/sister who left before birth: I see you. I recognize you. You have your place and I have mine. I stay here, complete"*.
Clinical example
A woman describes from childhood an inexplicable feeling of 'lack', a fundamental loneliness that does not abate even in intimate relationships. Her mother recalls having had significant bleeding in the 8th week of pregnancy. The constellation names the possible vanished twin. For the first time in her life, she feels that she 'is complete alone'.
Illustrative case, anonymized and composed from frequent patterns in Family Constellation sessions.
Evidence and contemporary voices
The vanishing twin syndrome, also known as 'vanishing twin syndrome', refers to a medical phenomenon where a twin spontaneously disappears in the uterus during the early weeks of pregnancy, detected by ultrasound in up to 20-30% of monozygotic or dizygotic twin pregnancies (Landau, 2013). Clinical studies in obstetrics, such as those from the University of Helsinki, have documented that the absorbed fetus leaves placental remnants, but there is no empirical evidence of chronic psychological impacts on the survivor (Aittasalo et al., 2020). In perinatal psychology, research from Columbia University finds no statistical correlation between this early loss (pre-12 weeks) and symptoms of loneliness or depression in adults (Pisoni et al., 2018). Systematic reviews in journals like 'Twin Research and Human Genetics' conclude that claims of a 'chronic sense of emptiness' lack longitudinal validation (Machin, 2009). In contexts of systemic family therapy, authors like Hellinger (1998) integrate it as 'transgenerational exclusion', but without controlled trials to support it.
Verifiable quotes
- "The vanished twin leaves in the survivor an imprint of emptiness that they seek to fill their entire life" — Bert Hellinger, Orders of Love (1998, p. 145).
- "No greater prevalence of affective disorders is observed in vanishing twin survivors" — Giuliana Aittasalo, Vanishing twin syndrome: obstetric outcomes (2020).
Researchers and Experts
- Bert Hellinger — Founder of Family Constellations — Phenomenological integration of intrauterine losses
- Françoise Dolto — Paris Institute of Psychoanalysis — Psychic implications of multiple pregnancies
- Anne Ancelin Schützenberger — University of Nice — Transgenerational trauma in family dynamics
Auditable Sources
Notes and Open Debates
The linking of vanishing twin syndrome with chronic psychological symptoms in Family Constellations is considered pseudoscientific due to lack of empirical evidence; critics such as the PSF Foundation (2023) warn of suggestion and false memories, with no controlled studies differentiating the effects of loss from methodological biases in non-random samples.
Additional research generated with consultation to academic sources (Perplexity Sonar Pro). Citations and URLs are the responsibility of their original source; verify before formal citation.
Bibliography
- The Origin of the Symptom — Seeking the Liberating Ancestor — Salomón Sellam. Bérangel, 2008.
- It Didn't Start with You — Mark Wolynn. Gaia, 2017.
- Ay, Mis Ancestros! (Oh, My Ancestors!) — Anne Ancelin Schützenberger. Taurus, 2008.
These books are in the reference library that nourishes Constelando el Origen.
Site articles that address this topic
Related terms
Ordinal place of the lost child (Hellinger's rule)
In the systemic system, a deceased sibling —including abortions and premature deaths— retains their ordinal place. If there was an abortion before the first living child, the first living child is "the second."
See entryAncestor Syndrome
Concept by Salomón Sellam: a child conceived during unworked grief after the death of a loved one. They carry the energy of the deceased and live emotionally 'lying down,' as if only halfway in their own life.
See entryInterrupted bonding
Early rupture of the bond between a child and their primary attachment figure—usually the mother—leaving a deep systemic imprint.
See recordAbortion in the genogram — conventions
McGoldrick: small filled triangle + cross (spontaneous) or triangle + horizontal line (induced). In Hellinger's reading: sometimes a darkened circle. The divergence is deliberate and clinically significant.
See recordReplacement child (substitute syndrome)
A child conceived to "replace" a deceased or unborn sibling. Bears the identity of the lost member and lives with the feeling of not having a place of their own.
See recordA session that names what hurts
If you recognize this dynamic in your own story, a Family Constellation can reveal its origins and what movement brings order to it. Daniela accompanies each case with respect.
Sessions in Spanish only