Systemic constellations

Systemic constellations is an experiential or 'phenomenological' approach to exploring a question or issue concerning the futuring process. In a constellation the participants form a 'living map' to represent the patterns and dynamics of the system in which the issue exists. The pattern is observed and adapted, allowing participants to explore the issue using a physical, relational and spatial vocabulary. Systemic constellations have their origins in family systems therapy and existential phenomenology.

In a constellation process the facilitator frames the exercise and proposes a set of roles/positions that have emerged from the futuring process (e.g. different scenarios, weak signals, drivers, protagonists, etc.). The participants are invited to choose a position, or move between positions and reflect on thoughts, emotions or physical sensations that emerge. The constellation can stop at this point, or continue by inviting participants to change postures or positions and observe the effects this might have on other parts of the system. The purpose of a constellation in futuring can be to bring somatic and intuitive knowledge into the conversation, or to unlock potential alternatives to undesirable futures.

At FoAM we use constellations as warming-up exercises, but also to explore complex or conflictual situations when thinking alone can't provide satisfactory answers.


Process

The space in which you conduct the systemic constellation should be as empty and free of clutter as possible. There should be enough room for people to move around and assume standing, sitting or lying positions. The only materials you need might are sheets of paper and a marker to write names of positions and if appropriate a camera to record the different constellations.


Read more about the foundation of Systemic constellations