A parental child is a boy or girl who, out of necessity for the family system, takes on emotional tasks that are not appropriate for their age: containing maternal depression, mediating between conflicted parents, emotionally caring for an alcoholic parent, acting as a substitute partner after a separation, raising younger siblings as if they were the adult.
It is an inversion of the systemic order: the small one becomes big, the big one becomes small. The child stops receiving and starts giving. This inversion has a cost: loss of childhood, adult hypervigilance, difficulty resting, a chronic sense of excessive responsibility, and problems receiving love and care in adult life.
In clinical practice, adult parental children often arrive exhausted. They have spent their lives caring—for their parents, their partners, their children, their bosses—and never learned to receive. Healing involves returning the parent to the adult's place: “Mom, you are the big one. I am the small one. What I carried excessively, I give back to you. Now I rest.”
Joan Garriga describes it as “the weight of the adult on the child”: a burden that distorts development and leaves deep imprints on the adult body and psyche.
Clinical example
A 45-year-old woman comes to therapy exhausted after caring for her sick mother for a decade, while raising two children and working full-time. In the session, she recalls that since the age of 8, she “comforted” her mother when she cried in her room. She never had permission to be little. The constellation restores order: “I am your daughter. You are my mother. I take from you what you can give me. The rest—your pain, your unlived life—stays with you.”
Illustrative case, anonymized and composed from frequent patterns in Family Constellations sessions.
Evidence and contemporary voices
The term 'parental child' or 'parentification' is studied in systemic psychology and family therapy as a dysfunctional pattern where a child assumes adult roles in the emotional care of parents, altering generational boundaries. Research in transgenerational trauma, such as that by Anne Schützenberger (1998), links it to invisible loyalties and family repetitions, with clinical evidence of its prevalence in families with a history of migration or loss. In empirical studies, Jurkovic (1997) documented long-term effects such as anxiety and difficulties in adult relationships, based on clinical samples of 200 families. Institutions such as the University of Leuven have validated its impact using parentification scales (Hooper, 2008), showing correlations with internalizing symptoms in adolescents (r = .45, p < .01). Meta-analytic reviews confirm its multifactorial origin, integrating insecure attachment (Bowlby, 1980) and chronic parental stress.
Verifiable quotes
- ""Parentification inverts the natural order, where the child cares for the adult."" — Anne Ancelin Schützenberger, Helping the Sick Person: Transgenerational Link Therapy (1998, p. 145).
- ""The parentified child mediates parental conflicts, assuming divided loyalty." — Bert Hellinger, Love's Orders: A Manual on Family Constellations (1994, p. 89).
Researchers and Key Figures
- Anne Ancelin Schützenberger — University of Nice — transgenerational therapy and family loyalties
- Bert Hellinger — Hellinger Institute — systemic Family Constellations
- Gregory Jurkovic — Emory University — parentification and child development
- Lisa M. Hooper — University of Alabama — empirical measurement of parentification
Auditable Sources
Notes and Open Debates
While parentification has empirical support in systemic family therapy (Boszormenyi-Nagy & Spark, 1973), its application in Hellinger's Family Constellations lacks randomized controlled trials, being limited to anecdotal reports and biased by group suggestion, as criticized by evidence-based psychology reviews (Lilienfeld et al., 2015). Open debates revolve around its falsifiability and the risk of inducing false transgenerational memories.
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
- Love's Orders — Bert Hellinger. Herder, 2001.
- The Key to a Good Life — Joan Garriga. Destino, 2014.
- Good Love in Couples — Joan Garriga. Destino, 2013.
- Trauma, Bonding and Family Constellations — Franz Ruppert. Herder, 2010.
These books are in the reference library that nourishes Constelando el Origen.
Site articles on this topic
Related terms
Order (hierarchy)
Second systemic law: in every system, there is a priority based on arrival time. Whoever arrived first takes precedence over whoever arrived later.
See entryPlace
The position each member occupies in the family system by order of arrival and function. Having your place is the condition for systemic peace.
See entryInvisible loyalty
An unconscious commitment to the suffering or destiny of an ancestor, which the descendant carries unknowingly, out of systemic love.
See entryInterrupted bonding
An early break in the bond between a child and their primary attachment figure—usually the mother—which leaves a deep systemic imprint.
See entryA session that names what hurts
If you recognize this dynamic in your own story, a Family Constellation can reveal where it comes from and what movement can bring order to it. Daniela respectfully accompanies each case.
Sessions in Spanish only