how to draw incest inheritance tree
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The Web address of this checklist is http://sfhelp.org/gwc/3_tree.htm
Updated 02-03-2015
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This 2-part YouTube video provides perspective on what you'll find in this worksheet. The video mentions eight self-improvement lessons - I've reduced that to seven.
This is one of a series of articles in Lesson 1 in this Web site - free your true Self to guide you in all situations, and reduce significant psychological wounds. This is one of several checklists to help you assess if you or someone you care about is a wounded survivor of early-childhood abandonment, neglect, and abuse (trauma).
This worksheet assumes you're familiar with...
the intro to this site and the premises underlying it
self-improvement Lesson 1, Parts 1 and 2
Q&A about families, and...
how to draw your genogram (family map)
Premises
With your childhood family in mind, read these out loud and notice any thoughts and feelings that occur...
Some families provide higher nurturance for their members (fill more physical + psychological + spiritual needs) than others.
Low-nurturance ("dysfunctional") families are caused by (a) adults inheriting [psychological wounds and ignorance] from their ancestors, and (b) societal ignorance and apathy about this inheritance.
Parental wounds and ignorance promote unwise child conceptions and abandoning, neglecting, and abusing (traumatizing) young kids. This promotes psychological wounds in the kids who grow up and repeat the cycle..
Family trees of significantly-wounded people have specific traits. Some traits (below) are symptoms of early-childhood caregivers' wounds, and other traits are traumas that cause and/or amplify psychological wounds.
Low-nurturance childhoods tend to reproduce and spread down the generations, until a wounded adult hits bottom and intentionally stops the inheritance cycle via personal recovery.
What are you aware of now?
Checklist Directions
See if your true Self is guiding you . If s/he is, you'll feel a mix of calm, centered, serene, awake, alive, alert, focused, purposeful, strong, grounded, confidant, and "light." If you don't feel such a mix now, a well-meaning false self may skew your answers to this worksheet..
Get a large piece of blank paper, like two 8.5" x 11" sheets taped together on the long edge. On it, draw your three or four-generational family tree. Draw this diagram large, for you'll be making notes all over it. Put names by each symbol. Include all the DNA-related (living and dead) people you know of in your family, and those of your current mate, their former mate (if any), and your former mate (if any).
Reserve at least 45" of undistracted time. Honestly and thoughtfully, note on the diagram each probable or sure instance of any of the traits below. The more time and care you take, the clearer your results will be. Stay clear that this wound-assessment worksheet is about growing your compassionate awareness, about blaming anyone!
The table of traits below is illustrative, not comprehensive. If you think of ancestral traits that aren't listed, include them. "Chronic" below means "repeated." You may wish to spend several days or weeks researching your family tree to fill this worksheet out. Option: make this a group project with one or more interested relatives.
If you think an ancestor may have had one of these traits but you aren't sure, add it to your diagram with a question mark. The psychological-wound traits and traumas in this checklist are organized in these groups:
Child-related traumas and symptoms,
Relationship traumas and symptoms,
Health-related traumas and symptoms,
Behavioral wound-symptoms,
Social, financial, and legal trauma, and...
Other traumas or symptoms
| Typical Family-tree Symptoms of Psychological Wounds | |
| 1) Child-related Traumas and Symptoms | |
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| 2) Relationship Traumas and Symptoms | |
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| 3) Health-related Traumas and Symptoms | |
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| 4) Common Behavioral Symptoms of Psychological Wounds | |
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| 5) Social, Financial, or Legal Trauma | |
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| 6) Other Trauma or Symptoms | |
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Deciding what is an "excessive" trait in an ancestor or relative is a subjective decision. To improve the objectivity of your research here, ask knowledgeable others (e.g. relatives, close family friends, involved health professionals) to reality-check your opinions about the existence of any trait you're unsure of. The more traumatic the trait, the more intense a reaction you'll probably get.
Family-tree factors like these suggest psychologically-wounded, unaware ancestors and significant family dysfunction.
If you are significantly wounded, you're likely to minimize or deny some of these family-tree traits. Also, traumas or traits like these can be (shameful) family secrets, and you may never have been told about them.
In general, the more of these traits someone's parents and/or other ancestors had, the higher the odds that significant psychological wounds passed on to the next generation. Note that this is not a complete list of traits.
"Scoring" a Family Tree We all have some of these ancestral traits and traumas. The more of the traits or events above that appear in someone's ancestry, the higher the odds that (a) they and their parents got too little emotional/spiritual nurturance in their early years, and that they (b) inherited significant [psychological wounds and unawareness].
On a scale from 1 to 5, rate yourself on how many of these family-tree traits you have (1 = few, 5 = many). ___
What Now ?
Continue assessing yourself and/or someone else for psychological wounding and unawareness.
- If you feel your current mate may be ruled by a false self (wounded), discuss this concept and worksheet with them. Ask your partner to study Lesson 1. If s/he balks, that raises the odds that you are wounded, because typical Grown Wounded Children (GWCs) unconsciously choose each other.
Note: until a GWC hits true (vs. pseudo) bottom, you persuade or force them to break their denials or want to start personal healing. Commonly, hitting bottom happens in midlife. Some wounded people never do. ...
If you believe an ex mate is significantly wounded and you raised kids together, your children are probably wounded and struggling with special needs. For more perspective, see...
Q&A on ex-mate relations
relating to a wounded person, and...
parenting "problem" children.
Consider discussing your findings here with your parent/s, siblings, and/or older children. The overall goal is to help them understand the [wounds + unawareness] cycle and how it's affecting all of you - specially your living and future kids.
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Resources
self-improvement Lesson 1 - asess for psychological wounds and reduce any you find. The guidebook for this Lesson is "Who's Really Running Your Life?" (4th ed., Xlibris.com, 2011);
Other helpful books:
Adult Children: The Secrets of Dysfunctional Families by John C. Friel Ph.D., Linda D. Friel M.A. (Paperback - 2/88)
Family Secrets: The Path to Self-Acceptance and Reunion by John Bradshaw (Paperback - 5/96); Look for a related audio tape.
Same House, Different Homes: Why Adult Children of Alcoholics Are Not All the Same by Robert J. Ackerman. This applies to all adults from low-nurturance childhoods
Secrets of Your Family Tree: Healing for Adult Children of Dysfunctional Families by Dave Carder, et. al. (Paperback - 3/95).
Notes / Thoughts …
Pause, breathe, and reflect - why did you read this article? Did you get what you needed? If not, what do you need? Who's answering these questions - your true Self, or ''someone else''?
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Source: http://sfhelp.org/gwc/3_tree.htm
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