Symbology and genogram

Systemic timeline

Visual representation of the clan's temporal axis: births, deaths, traumas, migrations marked on a line. Allows for the identification of temporal patterns (anniversary syndrome, mirror-age, cycles).

Daniela Giraldo Systemic glossary

The systemic timeline is a visualization tool for the clan's temporal axis, complementary to the static genogram. While the genogram represents the family structure (who's who and how they relate), the timeline represents when things happened —births, deaths, accidents, moves, traumas, significant events—.

Basic structure: a horizontal line with vertical markers for each significant event in the system, ordered chronologically. Each event is noted with: exact year, age of relevant members at that time, nature of the event, primary member involved.

Why it matters: many systemic patterns only become visible when crossing dates. Three classic examples:

Anniversary Syndrome (Schützenberger): the client enters a crisis at the exact age their grandmother was widowed; the symptom appears on the anniversary of the great-grandfather's death. Only visible by crossing dates.

Mirror-age (Fréchet): the client reactivates symptoms at the ancestor's key age. The timeline allows for identification of this coincidence.

Biological cycles (Fréchet): patterns that repeat approximately every 7 years, especially in years where the descendant reaches the same age an ancestor experienced a key event.

How it's built in session: the Family Constellation facilitator asks the client to date with the greatest possible precision the key events of the system —birth of each child, death of each member, major geographical moves, couple separations, significant professional events, important medical diagnoses—. The line is drawn, date patterns are sought.

Clinical importance: the timeline is an essential complement to the genogram when there is suspicion of anniversary syndrome, key-ages, or generational cycles. For Constelando, it's a useful diagnostic tool pre-session.

Clinical Example

A client with severe depression every November. The timeline reveals: the paternal great-grandfather died in November 1942 (Spanish Civil War). Her grandfather was born in November 1930 and lost his father at 12 years old. Her father was born in November 1965 and lost his (the grandfather) at 35 years old. Three generations of males with significant events in November. She, carrying this chain, experiences her crisis every November.

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

Bibliography

  • Oh, My Ancestors!Anne Ancelin Schützenberger. Taurus, 2008.
  • The Project-Purpose — Psychological Origin of Existential ProblemsMarc Fréchet. Le Souffle d'Or, 1999 (compilation of his work).

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

Site articles that deal with this topic

Are you experiencing this?

A 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 accompanies each case with respect.

Sessions in Spanish only