Background: The authors first demonstrate the necessity of a more complex vision of psychosomatics. This can be achieved by a systemic approach. The author’s previous research has clearly revealed that one of the most typical relationship characteristics of these families is the tendency to avoid expressing conflicts and emotional tensions. Difficulties in verbalizing emotional experiences stem from the fact that emotions are carefully filtered to conserve a ‘pseudoharmony’ in the family system. This ‘myth of unity’ seems to form the farreaching cement of the family beyond which ‘fantasies of rupture’, fears of family disaggregation can be found. Method: By constructing the genogram we discover the presence of traumatic events in the past of these families. The theme of loss often dominates these histories and is associated with deep emotional experiences of separation anxiety. Case Reports: Two clinical cases are presented. In the first, a woman consulted us for a recent acne aggravation. She progressively relates this to her mother’s sudden death. The genogram reveals that this mother has lost her mother due to a curious bigamy situation, that the patient did not know until 18 the secret of her birth, and that nothing was clear about the roles of the 3 different ‘fathers’ she had in her life. The second clinical case is a woman with atopic dermatitis dramatically increased after her marriage. In constructing her genogram she can express old grievances towards her father. We discover also that her father gave up his career to stay with his mother after his own father’s death. Eczema was necessary for our patient to take the time with her family of origin before leaving to live abroad. Conclusion: These cases illustrate that psychosomatic symptoms are belonging to three levels that are not antinomic: biological, psychological, and relational. These levels are complementary when seen from a perspective of complexity. The therapist’s function is to broaden the creative areas of freedom, giving the possibility for the patient and her/his family to understand the complex meaning of the symptom and free themselves from it.

The merits of a systemic vision and the usefulness of the genogram in Psychosmatics: application to psychodermatology / F., Poot; Onnis, Luigi. - In: DERMATOLOGY + PSYCHOSOMATICS. - ISSN 1422-9196. - STAMPA. - 2 (2):n. 2(2001), pp. 77-81. [10.1159/000146243]

The merits of a systemic vision and the usefulness of the genogram in Psychosmatics: application to psychodermatology.

ONNIS, Luigi
2001

Abstract

Background: The authors first demonstrate the necessity of a more complex vision of psychosomatics. This can be achieved by a systemic approach. The author’s previous research has clearly revealed that one of the most typical relationship characteristics of these families is the tendency to avoid expressing conflicts and emotional tensions. Difficulties in verbalizing emotional experiences stem from the fact that emotions are carefully filtered to conserve a ‘pseudoharmony’ in the family system. This ‘myth of unity’ seems to form the farreaching cement of the family beyond which ‘fantasies of rupture’, fears of family disaggregation can be found. Method: By constructing the genogram we discover the presence of traumatic events in the past of these families. The theme of loss often dominates these histories and is associated with deep emotional experiences of separation anxiety. Case Reports: Two clinical cases are presented. In the first, a woman consulted us for a recent acne aggravation. She progressively relates this to her mother’s sudden death. The genogram reveals that this mother has lost her mother due to a curious bigamy situation, that the patient did not know until 18 the secret of her birth, and that nothing was clear about the roles of the 3 different ‘fathers’ she had in her life. The second clinical case is a woman with atopic dermatitis dramatically increased after her marriage. In constructing her genogram she can express old grievances towards her father. We discover also that her father gave up his career to stay with his mother after his own father’s death. Eczema was necessary for our patient to take the time with her family of origin before leaving to live abroad. Conclusion: These cases illustrate that psychosomatic symptoms are belonging to three levels that are not antinomic: biological, psychological, and relational. These levels are complementary when seen from a perspective of complexity. The therapist’s function is to broaden the creative areas of freedom, giving the possibility for the patient and her/his family to understand the complex meaning of the symptom and free themselves from it.
2001
Genogram · Psychodermatology · Systemic approach · Acne · Atopic dermatitis
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
The merits of a systemic vision and the usefulness of the genogram in Psychosmatics: application to psychodermatology / F., Poot; Onnis, Luigi. - In: DERMATOLOGY + PSYCHOSOMATICS. - ISSN 1422-9196. - STAMPA. - 2 (2):n. 2(2001), pp. 77-81. [10.1159/000146243]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/88701
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