Building Family Resilience
Emotion Focused Family Counseling Approach
Gian Sugiana Sugara and Rina Rindanah
Department of Guidance and Counseling, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Bandung, Indonesia
giansugiana@gmail.com
Keywords: Emotionally Focused Family Counselling, Resilience, Attachment.
Abstract: Changes in the family have a significant impact on family members. The difficult and pressing situation makes
family members are in a stressful situation. For that, it needs to increase is the resilience to be able to confront
the situation. Attachment theory offers robust developmental models for conceptualizing emotional distress
and symptomatic behavior as an adaptive response to emotional insecurity in parent-child relationships.
Recent developments in emotionally focused family counselling and attachment-based family therapy
demonstrate promising empirical support for the application of attachment theory to the treatment of
childhood disorders and family distress. This article explains apply emotionally focused family counselling
to improve family resilience.
1 INTRODUCTION
Resilience in the family becomes an important factor
in developing the mental health of a family member
(Stavrianopoulos, Faller and Furrow, 2014). Situation
and challenges of life weight and pressure that often
create stress individual demands individuals to
develop psychological resilience in the face. Families
who have a good psychological toughness will cause
all members feel the security and harmony in the
family. Resilience in families formed by a strong
emotional bond among family members (Aquilino,
1999). Interwoven good emotional reinforce the
psychological power among members that will give a
sense of security so that in a stressful situation, each
family member has a psychological resistance.
Emotional bonds within the family formed by
attachment among family members. Johnson (2006)
describes the more people have an emotional
attachment to their family members, then increasing
psychological resilience. Attachment concept became
a phenomenon that many take to help individuals in
the family. There are two approaches that use the
concept of attachment counselling to help families to
improve the resilience that family counselling is
based on attachment (Diamond, Siqueland, and
Diamond, 2003) and emotion-focused family
counselling (Johnsonand Lee, 2000; Johnson,
Maddeaux, and Blouin, 1998). As developed at this
time indicates that the family counselling practice
focuses emotions can help families to improve the
resilience of individuals.
This article contains the emotion-focused family
counselling in improving the resilience of the family.
Emotion-focused family counselling is an approach
that is heavily influenced by the humanistic
approach', family systems theory, and the most
important is attachment theory (Johnson and
Greenman, 2006). Through the integration of
emotional response intrapsychic and interactional
patterns of interpersonal, emotion-focused family
counselling to help families to create a more secure
connection between each other (Johnson, Hunsley,
Greenberg, and Schindler, 1999). This approach
allows clients to explore the resentment they feel, and
see how it impacts the relationship and then apply the
new information that they should find to build
stronger relationships and emotional as well as a safe
one another (Johnson, 2007). The goal of emotion
focused family counselling is to identify the
projective, develop stickiness "attachment",
rebuilding healthy family relationships, find and
explain the needs of the individual, encouraging
autonomy as explained by the theory of Bowen
namely differentiation, and work under the task of life
development (Makinen and Johnson, 2006).
Sugara, G. and Rindanah, R.
Building Family Resilience - Emotion Focused Family Counseling Approach.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences (ICES 2017) - Volume 2, pages 57-62
ISBN: 978-989-758-314-8
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
57
2 THE CONCEPT OF EMOTION
FOCUSED FAMILY
COUNSELING TO IMPROVE
RESILIENCE
2.1 Basic Assumptions
Emotion focused family counselling aims to reduce
stress and anxiety in adult relationships and create or
re-create a more secure attachment bond (Makinen
and Johnson, 2006). Emotion-focused family
counselling is a variant of emotion focused therapy
applied in the family setting. Focusing on the key
element of emotion is an important transformation in
the treatment of emotional focus. By focusing on
emotions, are egalitarian, counsellors can create a
"safe environment" for clients (Greenberg et al.,
1993). As mentioned earlier, emotion-focused family
counselling based on the theory of attachment.
However, the emotion-focused counselling also uses
elements of Gestalt counselling and family systems
theory. As noted by Greenberg and Johnson (1988),
the second theory sees humans as "the process of
becoming", not "made up," capable of living in the
volatile life. Both good Gestalt theory and systems
theory also focus on the "here and now" is different
in the construction of history that is often found in the
more traditional psychodynamic approach to therapy.
Emotion focused counselling produces basic
theories explaining the importance of involving the
"real relationship of the inner psychological world of
the two partners in interaction" (Greenberg and
Johnson, 1988) and contextual relationships as the
basis also of each person's behavior in relation to
intrapsychic experience. The following is a summary
of the principles of emotion-focused family
counselling:
Counselors act as a consultant during the
counseling process and help families and
collaborating that will allow them to create a
secure bond and explore their emotions.
Emotions are the key element in the
relationship. It regulates the viscosity behavior
and affects how people feel about themselves
and how they had an intimate relationship with
another person
Need for close family members (attachment) is
the desire healthy and adaptive. Problems occur
when people are not able to enforce those
requirements or feel the need for a couple or a
family member in a safe manner. For example,
a girl wants to be closer to his mother (which is
the desire of a very precise), but he does it by
acting out (pattern of unsafe behavior).
Problems occur when people develop their
interaction patterns based on negative emotions
and based on the experience they have in a
relationship. According to Johnson (1996),
emotional and interactional patterns will
develop a self-reinforcing feedback.
Changes occur by creating new emotional
experiences in this relationship which is based
on the interaction of a secure attachment-boost.
This theory does not focus on insight into the
past, catharsis, or negotiation.
The counselor looked at partner relationship
with "clients" in the session. The purpose of
counseling is to create a relationship based on a
secure bond.
Emotion focused counselling believes that "bond"
exists between the people, and if a couple or family
come to counselling, the bond has been compromised
in some form (Johnson and Talitman, 1997). Trust
may be broken, people may feel insecure in
relationships, and family members may not believe
that other people can be trusted or even safe. Based
on this belief, emotion-focused family counselling
strategy is to heal the broken bond, to restore
confidence, and to help create a safe environment for
its members, and not to resolve introjects and
projections in childhood (Johnson and Talitman,
1997).
Emotion focused family counsellor has three main
tasks: first, to create and maintain a therapeutic
relationship that is "safe" in which each member of
the family to explore themselves and others. The
second task is to access the client emotions and then
formulate them into a new basic emotion and more
positive among family members. The third task is the
restructuring of the interaction between members of
the family, which in essence is the change
problematic behavior patterns become more positive
patterns (Johnson et al., 2005). To accomplish this
task, the counsellor focuses emotion took the three-
stage process of counselling and nine steps in family
counselling (Johnson et al., 2005).
2.2 Views on the Family Resilience
Emotion focused family counselling defines "health"
as flexibility, rather than being caught in a tight
pattern of emotional and behavioural responses.
When individual healthy, then he has the ability to
regulate emotions in a healthy and able to relate to
others in a healthy way by creating a sense of security
in relationship (Johnson, 2002). This includes the
ability to access, receive and understand the emotions
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
58
of a person. Pathology refers to the concept of
emotional response, behavioural, cognitive, and
perception does not match for the reality of the
current context (Johnson, 2002).
When families or couples go into counselling
sessions, emotion focused family counselling view
that family healthy but currently stuck in repetitive
behavior patterns resulting from injury viscosity, or
feel the loss of a sense of security and comfort.
Counsellors focus on seeing how the cycle of
behavior and interaction created between members of
a running system (Greenberg and Johnson, 1988;
Johnson, 1996). By examining the behavior of
communication through the frame attachment theory,
emotion-focused family counsellor family assumes
creating negative emotional patterns that make them
"trapped" in a cycle of repeated interactions. The
views of family are not based on pathological, but
rather on the view that the family spouse has a habit
of a negative interactional cycle that clients are
complaining about (Johnson and Denton, 2007). This
system is healthy and intact, only this time in the
cycle of unproductive and repetitive that can be
interrupted with the behavioural patterns just good
emotional, cognitive and perceptual experiences that
will create new homeostasis relationships (Johnson et
al., 2005).
2.3 How Change Happens in
Counselling
According to emotion focused family counselling
changes occur when families are able to restructure
their interactions so affiliation and autonomy are both
received and maintained in a relationship (Moser and
Johnson, 2008). Changes occur in relationship
counselling when the counsellor was able to create a
safe environment for every member to acknowledge
and explore their own emotions and find acceptance
and understanding (Johnson et al., 2005). The
counsellor then consults with the couple through the
three stages described earlier. The process of change
is illustrated in the following case studies:
Indra and Santi have been married for 2 years.
They have a good bond of love at the beginning of
their marriage, but that all changed when Indra lost
his job and Santi pregnant with their first child. Santi
and Indra made the decision that, after the birth of a
child, Indra will stay in the house and Santi works at
the hospital. The arrangement turned out to be very
stressful for both partners, when the economic
downturn, Andi attempts job search is not successful
and Santi need to better understand it and spend less
time with his family. During the first session, Andi
said that Santi was always grumpy and do not provide
emotional support, and he worried that he would
leave her. Santi was always angry and complained
that he could spend more time with the child and then
distanced himself from Andi. In the same session,
Santi tells about his doubts about not being adequate
breast and said that the feelings are not worthy of
caring for her child.
Counselling process as focusing the families of
emotions are illustrated as follows, counsellors spent
the first session-second to build collaborative
relationships with clients, observing patterns of
interaction partner and identifying the cycle that
creates the problem. Andi complained about the
unavailability of Santi, and he interpreted the
complaint as criticism as a mother and became angry.
He would then withdraw, which would increase Andi
feeling insecure in the relationship. Before change
can happen, both partners must be aware of the
emotional experience that is felt in the relationship, to
learn that they are not the enemy, and know that the
negative cycle of their interactions cause them to feel
pain and insecurity. This concept is carried out in the
first stage.
In the second stage, Indra and Santi encouraged to
re-join the fight against the negative cycle of negative
interactions they create. Stickiness unmet needs
(Andi will criticize and then scared, and she would
get angry and then withdrew). After they both
understand the cycle and be ready to change it, the
counsellor began to restructure the pattern of negative
emotional interactions that happened to them, where
they become more open and responsive to each other.
New interactions will lead to Indra and Santi to form
an emotional bond that is more secure.
In the final stage, the process of change is
occurring and the pair were able to apply new
learning cycle for the specific situation. Indra and
Santi are able to recognize and identify patterns of
their responses that trigger a negative cycle and feel
secure with each other to openly discuss it and ask for
a commitment to one another.
This example illustrates the use of emotion-
focused counselling in the process of change in the
counselling sessions. During this session, the couple
learned that by expressing fear, vulnerability, and the
need for mutual support to one another, they were
able to create a real language relationship in which
there is a sense of acceptance, understanding, and
change in response (Johnson and Greenman 2006).
By focusing on the interaction process, the counsellor
can work on patterns that support problem and turn it
into a pattern that supports the solution (Johnson et
al., 2005). By doing the proper response, counsellors
Building Family Resilience - Emotion Focused Family Counseling Approach
59
promote change by changing the consciousness of
what is being communicated to what is needed by
everyone. This example also illustrates that the
counsellor does not need to be stuck on the content
issue but should effectively address the problem to
make changes (Johnson et al., 2005). All of this is
aimed at achieving the restructuring interaction using
new emotions to motivate new behavioural response
(Johnson and Greenman, 2006). When one member
actually aware of the needs of other members and be
able to understand their needs in themselves and in a
relationship, they are motivated to provide new
behavior in the form of a new emotional response.
Restructuring cycle begins by changing the behavior
of the response of emotional experiences in a new
way. Changes occur through focus and restructuring
of emotional experience (Johnson and Greenman,
2006).
2.4 Technique of Emotion Focused
Family Counselling
In creating and maintaining a therapeutic relationship
with the client, the counsellor focuses emotion
emphasize how it works by using empathy,
originality, and respect and has the ability to focus on
the interactional system family (Johnson et al., 2005).
Not only to create a therapeutic relationship, has
emotion-focused family counselling also emphasized
the restructuring expressions and emotions. It
requires skills in accessing emotional and do
reformulation of the emotion. Greenberg and Johnson
(1988) summarized these skills are attending skill,
refocusing, closeness, expression analysis,
intensification, symbolization, and create goals.
Present involved in helping clients to gain new
experiences
Refocusing is a technique in which the
counselor asks the client to remain focused on
what she was feeling and experience that feeling
intensify.
Proximity means that the focus is on the here
and now experience
Expression Analysis teaches his clients to pay
attention to nonverbal communication.
Intensification is the experience of
consciousness through repetition or metaphor.
Symbolization help clients to understand the
essence of what has happened in the therapeutic
environment.
Setting goals means that the client is able to
formulate a new behavior based on new
experiences found in the therapeutic
environment.
Emotion focused family counselling is one of the
best models are validated empirically, in a couple or
family counselling (Baucom, Shoham, Mueser,
Daiuto, and Stickle, 1998). Inventors emotionally
focused family counselling consistent emotional
support progress through empirical research. Their
study tested the efficacy of the overall counselling
and support focused emotions (Greenberg and
Johnson, 1985). Then another study conducted by
Greenberg and Johnson (1988) discusses the process
of change in the counselling sessions and analyse the
factors of success in emotion-focused counselling. A
meta-analysis conducted by Johnson et al. (1999)
showed that emotion-focused counselling effective in
dealing with couples experiencing marital misery.
Study counselling focuses emotion, discussed
earlier, as well as numerous other studies conducted
to test this intervention, shows that on average, 90%
of couples who assisted using this model to report an
increase in significant positive changes in their
relationships compared to couples who do not
conduct counselling sessions. Similar studies provide
evidence that 70% to 73% of couples recover from
emotional stress after a family counselling session
focused emotions (Johnson et al., 1999). Research on
emotion-focused counselling and practice shows that
this model can be used with different populations and
different issues. The counselling focuses emotions
also can effectively work with a partner with the
behavior of hypersexual (Reid and Woolley, 2006),
the couple depression (Dessaulles, Johnson, and
Denton, 2003), families who have children with
chronic diseases (Kowal, Johnson, and Lee 2003;
Walker, Johnson, Manion, and Cloutier, 1996), and
the families who have members suffering from
bulimia (Johnson, Maddeaux, and Blouin, 1998).
Research also shows that the effectiveness of
emotion-focused family counselling clients is not
affected by age, education, income, or cognitive
complexity (Denton, Burleson, Clark, Rodriguez, and
Hobbs, 2000).
3 PROCESS OF EMOTION
FOCUSED FAMILY
COUNSELING TO IMPROVE
RESILIENCE
Emotion focused family counselling initiate a
response by one or two counselling sessions focusing
on current and emerging issues and dynamics that
occur between family members. Counsellors build a
good relationship with clients in order to secure the
establishment of counselling sessions feeling. A
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
60
mode that counsellors do in this stage is to reflect and
validate against every experience that every member
of the family (Johnson, 2004). In this phase, each
family member is given the opportunity to express
their feelings felt and put forward issues of concern
in family issues and reactions to these issues.
Counsellors conduct searches and to reflect on the
experience and to identify patterns that occur between
the negative emotions among members of the family
(Stavrianopoulos, Faller and Furrow, 2014).
Counsellors do access the negative emotional
patterns that occur between family members in a
circular manner. Each member is facilitated to
express his feelings from the experience in the family.
Counsellors do reconstruct the issues raised in the
crisis of family problems attachment make every
member feel unsafe. At this stage, the counsellor
identification of conflicts between family members
and the identification of negative emotions and
attachment to individual happens to family members
(Johnson, 2004). Accessing primary emotions such as
fear, hurt and sadness create empathy among family
members, responsiveness, and help escalation
returning family (Johnson et al., 2005).
The second stage is to transform the interactional
patterns that have been identified in the first stage.
Counsellors focus on how the attachment between
family members needs are not met and do change
patterns of emotion is a reaction to that situation
(Johnson, 2004). At this stage, the counsellor
facilitates changes unmet basic emotional needs that
need to happen between children and parents.
Changes occur when parent’s responsive attachment
needs of children resulting in a positive emotional
relationship that makes the relationship to be safe and
healthy. During phase two therapists recognized the
need to support children and parents in working
through the fear often associated with vulnerabilities
experienced in family relationships depressed and re-
engaging new patterns of availability and
responsiveness (Johnson, 2004).
The final stage of emotion-focused family
counselling is the consolidation of family change has
been made in the second phase. At the end of this
stage, the family is able to integrate new ways and
engaged and feeling of security among family
members (Johnson et al., 2005). Discussions were
characterized by openness, responsiveness, and
engagement among family members. It's important
for families to learn how to repair a failed attempt to
connect outside of the session. Prior to termination,
the counsellor wanted to see how families deal with
an old problem with a new resolve by the way.
Counsellors also want to help families strengthen
their vision to make changes that positively affect the
connection between family members.
4 CONCLUSION
Emotion Focused Family Counselling is a
counselling approach oriented attachment theory.
Emotions in perspective focus emotional counselling
based on the results of positive attachment
relationships among family members. Emotion-
focused family counselling can help family members
to improve the resilience of self. This is done by
developing a healthy emotional management in the
relationship between family members. The counsellor
acts as a consultant to help clients with the process
which provides a sense of security among family
members, identifying patterns of negative emotions in
the interaction and helping to carry out the
reconstruction of negative emotions by changing the
way people are responding or a new one. Process
changes made in the emotion-focused family
counselling to help clients find fulfilment attachment
expected ushered the family members that will help
family members to increase psychological resilience.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The writers would like to express their gratitude to the
Indonesian government especially the Indonesian
Directorate General of Higher Education (DIKTI),
Indonesia Endowment Fund for Education (LPDP) in
funding this research and Indonesia University of
Education (UPI) for permitting them to conduct a
development research in education field.
REFERENCES
Aquilino, W. S., 1999. Two views of one relationship:
Comparing parents’ and young
adult children’s reports of the quality of
intergenerational relations. Journal of
Marriage and the Family, 61, 858–870.
Baucom, D. H., Shoham, V., Mueser, K. T., Daiuto, A. D.,
Stickle, T. R., 1998. Empirically supported couple and
family interventions for marital distress and adult
mental health problems. Journal of Consulting and
Clinical Psychology, 66(1), 53–88.
Denton, W. H., Burleson, B. R., Clark, T. E., Rodriguez, C.
P., Hobbs, B. V., 2000. A randomized trial of emotion-
focused therapy for couples in training clinic. Journal
of Marital and Family Therapy, 26(1), 65–78.
Building Family Resilience - Emotion Focused Family Counseling Approach
61
Dessaulles, A., Johnson, S. M., Denton, W. H., 2003.
Emotion-focused therapy for couples in the treatment
of depression: A pilot study. American Journal of
Family Therapy, 31, 345–353.
Greenberg, L. S., Johnson, S. M., 1985. Different effects of
experiential and problem-solving interventions in
resolving marital conict. Journal of Clinical and
Consulting Psychology, 53(2), 175–184.
Greenberg, L. S., Johnson, S. M., 1988. Emotionally
focused therapy for couples. New York, NY: The
Guilford Press.
Johnson, S. M., 1996. The practice of emotionally focused
marital therapy: Creating connection. Florence, KY:
Brunner-Mazel.
Johnson, S. M., 2006. Integration in emotionally focused
therapy: A reply to Simon. The Family Journal:
Counselling and Therapy for Couples and Families, 14,
1–4.
Johnson, S. M., 2007. The contribution of emotionally
focused couples therapy [Special edition]. Journal of
Contemporary Psychology: Humanistic Psychology.
Johnson, S. M., Bradley, B., Furrow, J., Lee, A., Palmer,
G., Tilley, D., Woolley, S., 2005. Becoming an
emotionally focused couple therapist: The workbook.
New York, NY: Brunner-Routledge.
Johnson, S. M., Denton, W. H., 2007. Emotionally focused
couple therapy: Creating secure connections. In A. S.
Gurman & N. S. Jacobson (Eds.), Clinical handbook of
couple therapy. New York, NY: The Guilford Press.
Johnson, S. M., Greenberg, L. S., 1985. Differential effects
of experiential and problem-solving interventions in
resolving marital conict. Journal of Consulting and
Clinical Psychology, 53(2), 175–184.
Johnson, S. M., Greenberg, L. S., 1987. Emotionally
focused marital therapy: An overview. Psychotherapy:
Theory, Research & Practice, 24, 552–560.
Johnson, S. M., Greenman, P., 2006. The path to a secure
bond: Emotionally focused couple therapy. Journal of
Clinical Psychology: In Session, 62(5), 597–609.
Johnson, S. M., Hunsley, J., Greenberg, L. S., Schindler, D.,
1999. Emotionally focused couples therapy: Status and
challenges. Journal of Clinical Psychology: Science
and Practice, 6, 67–79.
Johnson, S. M., Maddeaux, C., Blouin, J., 1998.
Emotionally focused family therapy for bulimia :
Changing attachment patterns. Psychology: Theory,
Research and Practice, 35, 238–247.
Johnson, S. M., Talitman, E., 1997. Predictors of success in
emotionally focused marital kowtherapy. Journal of
Marital and Family Therapy, 23(2), 135–152.
Kowal, J., Johnson, S. M., Lee, A., 2003 Chronic illness in
couples: A case for emotionally focused therapy.
Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 29(3), 299–
310.
Makinen, J. A., Johnson, S. M., 2006. Resolving attachment
injuries in couples using EFT: Steps towards
forgiveness and reconciliation. Journal of Consulting
and Clinical Psychology, 74(6), 1055–1064.
Moser, M. B., Johnson, S. M., 2008. The integration of
systems and humanistic approaches in emotionally
focused therapy for couples. Person-Centered and
Experiential Psychotherapies, 7(4), 262–278.
Palmer, G., Johnson, S. M., 2002. Becoming an emotionally
focused therapist. Journal of Couple and Relationship
Therapy, 1(3), 1–20.
Ruzgyte, Edita, Spinks, Spinks. 2011. Emotionally Focused
Family Therapy. In Linda Metcalf, Marriage & Family
Therapy A Practice-Oriented Approach. New York,
NY: Springer Publishing.
Stavrianopoulos, Katharine, Faller, George, Furrow, James
L., 2014. Emotionally Focused Family Therapy:
Facilitating Change Within a Family System, Journal
of Couple & Relationship Therapy, 13:1, 25-43.
Walker, J. G., Johnson, S. M., Manion, I., Cloutier, P.,
1996. Emotionally focused marital intervention for
couples with chronically ill children. Journal of
Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 64(5), 1029–
1036.
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
62