Most people understand that childhood experiences and adversity can shape who we become as adults. The specifics of those impacts are often explored in therapy. What may not be as obvious is the impact created by events further back in the family history. By exploring your family tree more fully, you may gain a better understanding of wounds, anxieties, beliefs, coping mechanisms, and unhealthy patterns that were passed unknowingly from one generation to the next, causing ripple effects even today.
Did a grandparent experience the horrors of the Holocaust firsthand? Or struggle with alcohol addiction and mood volatility? Did a father die young or a mother lose a child? Did people in your family tree experience racism, slavery, xenophobia, or threats to survival after arriving in a new land? Did previous generations cope with job loss, financial insecurity, abuse, neglect, suicide, war, family rupture, or chronic illness?
As we confront the generational impacts of trauma—the ghosts in our family tree—we wonder:
- What fears and survival strategies were understandably transmitted from one generation to the next?
- What coping mechanisms—healthy or unhealthy—were adopted and normalized?
- What resulting beliefs, priorities, and expectations have been passed on repeatedly?
As we gain greater perspective on our families and ourselves, we can let go of anger and blame that stem from a complex, multigenerational story. We can release shame that didn’t start with us. We can claim the inheritance of incredible strengths and resiliencies. And ultimately, we can challenge unhealthy generational patterns, creating change for generations to come.