“That story is a series of ‘scenes.’ The timeline helps identify the scenes to draw out. “Once you have the events laid out on a timeline, you can pinpoint the most meaningful ones for the purpose of telling a story,” Zerwick told me in an email conversation. Phoebe Zerwick, director of journalism at Wake Forest University and a columnist I worked with when I was metro editor for the Winston-Salem Journal, refers to chronologies not just as a way to organize stories, but as a way to understand stories. In America’s Best Newspaper Writing, Christopher Scanlan and Roy Peter Clark of the Poynter Institute note that when writers write in chronological order, they invite readers to enter a story and stick with it. I began to think about how writers create a cohesive narrative in fiction or nonfiction. Might there be a way to do more with a genogram - a way to put my narrative experience into it?
So, as I’ve often done since beginning my second career as a clinical mental health counselor after 35-plus years as a journalist, writer and editor, I put on my critical thinking cap. Although the genogram helped promote conversation, I found I couldn’t always use the information gathered to help connect the issues presented by clients. Here was a tool that instantly created dialogue between counselor and client as they reviewed family history, dynamics, health, socioeconomic data and more.īut a funny thing happened when I began incorporating the genogram into my own work as an intern.
The first time I watched my internship supervisor use a genogram, I became enamored.