Understanding Family Constellations
“The mind moves quickly and the soul moves slowly,” said Bert Hellinger, the founder of Family and Systemic Constellations. I think this describes something most of us feel but rarely put words to.
We all know the experience of the mind racing ahead, wanting answers, clarity, solutions. It wants to understand, fix, tidy, and move on.
But the soul has its own timing. It moves at the pace of truth, not urgency.
And sometimes it gets stuck. Unhealed family histories don’t simply disappear. The energy often travels down the generations until it reaches someone far enough away from the original event, yet deeply affected by its residue, that something finally needs to shift.
When I introduce Constellations work to someone new, I often say that it’s less about thinking and more about listening. Not just with the ears, but with the whole body. The movement of the soul is subtle. It shows itself in a shift of posture, a change in breath, a quiet impulse to turn toward someone or something that has been left out. It’s not dramatic. It’s not fast. It’s honest.
I remember being a representative in a constellation twenty years ago, standing in for the client’s grandfather. As I stood in the centre of the room, in the Field, I suddenly couldn’t place weight on my left foot. It rolled to the outside edge and became tight and painful. The client then remembered that this grandfather had suffered a farming accident and nearly lost his foot. What a wonder. I was part of a collective consciousness, the client’s family system, expressing itself through sensations in my body. I was still Lucy, and yet I could feel something on behalf of this family. Some truths were able to be seen and acknowledged, simply and honestly.
In a Constellation, we give space for these slow movements to appear. Representatives don’t act or analyse. They wait. They feel. They allow something deeper than the mind to guide them. And often, what emerges is a truth the seeker didn’t know consciously, but recognises instantly.
People are sometimes surprised by how little “doing” is involved. They expect techniques or strategies. Instead, they find stillness. They find pacing that honours the weight of what came before them. They discover that the system knows how to move toward balance if we stop rushing it.
Part of family trauma is the shame that accompanied a difficulty, not just the incident itself. Not so long ago, an unmarried mother might have been forced to give her baby up for adoption, and the whole event kept secret. The trauma multiplies: breaking the moral codes of the time, the shame placed on the family, the unbearable loneliness of a young pregnancy, giving birth in a Home for Unmarried Mothers, and having no support or autonomy.
So in a session or workshop, there is something almost magical about having another person see you, really see this event, and look with warm, loving eyes. Not the eyes of social expectations, church, or community, but the eyes of now. This kindness, this seeing, brings healing to the client and to the whole network they belong to.
For me, the movement of the soul is the moment when the body says yes before the mind catches up. It’s the moment something long-held shifts. Tears can flow, burdens can be returned, and blessings received from the strength of our ancestors.
It’s the moment a family story begins to breathe again. The event itself hasn’t changed, but the energy around it has. We have unentangled someone from the difficulty and lightened their load. And it always happens slowly, in its own time, with its own intelligence. As a facilitator, I lend my body to guide these movements, sense the blockages, and help restore order to the system. Doing just enough to help the system from freeze to a small movement, which can ripple out in time.
When we slow down enough to feel it, something in us recognises the truth of it. Not as an idea, but as a lived experience. And that is where healing begins.
