Categories
Family Markers

Family: Where the Stories Begin

Family—whether it’s the one we’re born into, the workplace “family” we join, or the media we unconsciously absorb—plants the thoughts, beliefs, and emotions that shape the course of our lives.

In the Elements framework, Family is a marker, one of the core influences shaping our inner narrative. And it’s a big one.

We tend to think of family narrowly: parents, siblings, and maybe a quirky uncle. But in truth, family is any group that gives us structure, belonging, and a sense of identity—or at least tries to. School families, church families, work families, recovery families, even TV families. Wherever there’s a powerful bond or strong shaping influence, that’s a kind of family.

These families transmit BABEs—Blooming Auto-thoughts, Beliefs, and Emotions—whether we’re aware of it or not. Sometimes this transfer is conscious and clear. Other times, it’s buried. Either way, what’s passed along can create the very Consequences (the outer experiences) we later find ourselves needing to heal or rewrite.

As a marriage and family therapist, I’ve learned to look at people in context. No one exists in isolation. We are shaped by the people around us—and in many cases, by the need to fit in, be loved, or avoid conflict. Family systems are deeply complex, often too knotted to untangle without a bit of outside perspective. And while they can offer safety, they can also ask us to contort ourselves in order to stay included.

We start off whole—just like Leo and Orion, my goats, before they learned to love their new home. But as we grow, many of us try to become what our families want. When being fully ourselves isn’t safe, we shape-shift. We conform. We take on a slant—a point of view—that prioritizes someone else’s comfort over our own truth.

Eventually, that slant becomes the lens through which we see the world.

It’s how home becomes a prison.

Turning Point: Reframing the Stories

And yet… this isn’t the end of the story.

If slant can form unconsciously, it can also be reframed with awareness. We can use the Elements—Tools like Dig, Go, HOme, JI, and Imagine—to uncover the old family messages, soften them with compassion, and begin to rewrite what we’ve internalized.

Even if you come from a loving family (and many of us do, in some ways), the messages passed down may still be mismatched to your unique self. Even the most well-intended parent can pass along fear, control, or outdated beliefs. Most do. Most of us do, too.

My own experience? I learned early that love had to be earned—and that to earn it, I’d need to work very, very hard. That pattern extended far beyond my family of origin. It followed me into almost every environment that felt like “family”—school, work, even friendships.

Those environments shaped my BABEs. And until I recognized the slant they created, I stayed inside their walls, wondering where the real me had gone.

So here’s the invitation:

Start noticing your own inherited stories.
Who planted them?
Do they still serve you?
Were they ever really yours?

Family is where the stories begin. But they don’t have to end there.

Categories
Course Episodes Discourse Markers

Discourse: The Stories We Absorb (Before We Even Know We’re Listening)

We Breathe It In Before We Know It


We don’t always realize we’ve taken in a belief until it starts living our life for us.

Discourse—those shared societal and cultural narratives—functions like a megaphone for the dominant voice in the room.

It broadcasts what’s acceptable, what’s valuable, what’s normal. And often, we absorb that voice before we’ve even formed our own.

Some of it is explicit: “Success looks like this.”


Some of it is subtle: a glance, a commercial, a child-sized sigh at a parent’s approval.


The Angle That Becomes the Story


We start with a natural, full-bodied sense of self.

Sidebar: Nature Nudges is a series of reflections I write about lessons from the natural world. Animals, like goats, often provide a mirror for human development. They begin life with an innate sense of presence and ease—completely at home in their bodies and environment. One story, about two goats named Leo and Orion, explores how internal safety can turn a perceived prison into a home. Read more in Nature Nudges → But slowly—sometimes imperceptibly—we contort to fit the stories around us.

Stories about how to be likable. How to belong. How to stay safe.

This is the perspective we don’t choose. Not at first.

We internalize the perspective of the group—family, school, workplace, media—until it becomes our own. Until we live by rules we never wrote. Until this angle of interpretation takes over and we wake up one day not quite sure where we went.


How Discourse Reinforces Itself


Discourse can feel like home. But it can also become a prison.

And here’s the twist: we keep reinforcing it—through the things we tell ourselves, the things we leave out, and the unedited reruns we let loop in our heads.

“I’m too much.” “I don’t belong.” “I have to earn love.”

These quick internal responses—what I call our ABCs: Auto-thoughts, Beliefs, and the emotional Consequences they create—are often hand-me-downs from a larger system.

Ones we didn’t know we could question.


The Invitation to Reframe


But we can.

When we name the discourse, we begin to shift the perspective. We begin to reframe the narrative. We begin to write new stories—ones where even the hardest moments become part of a sacred reorientation. Where depression, cancer, or crisis are not curses, but cosmic course corrections. Where escape is no longer the goal—because we’ve made our internal space safe again.
Our angle of interpretation, in the end, forms our personality. It determines what we see as possible. Most people don’t realize that point of view can be chosen—that it is, in fact, one of the most powerful tools we have. And that means we can choose one that brings more truth, more beauty, more kindness, and more agency into our lives.


Working with the Tools


That’s what this work is for.

The Elements—Tools like GO, HOme, Imagine, JI—help us recognize the borrowed angles and choose new ones. Not by erasing our past, but by integrating it. Consciously. Creatively. Courageously.

Because the truth is: life doesn’t just happen and then become a story.
More often, we live the story we’ve already started telling.

Let’s make it one that fits.

Auto-Thoughts

Quick, automatic thoughts that pop up in daily life—often shaped by old beliefs and past experiences.