dysfunctional family
Dysfunctional family describes a family system where patterns of communication, roles, and emotional needs are chronically distorted, leaving members struggling to feel safe, seen, or supported. It is not a diagnosis but a descriptive frame used in therapy and recovery communities.
Common features include poor boundaries, denial, secrets, scapegoating, enmeshment, addiction, abuse, parentification, or rigid family rules like "don't talk, don't feel, don't trust." Children raised in these systems often develop survival roles—hero, scapegoat, lost child, caretaker—and carry the patterns into adult relationships. Clinical work focuses on naming the dynamics, grieving what was missing, differentiating from the family system, and building healthier templates for connection and self-worth.




















