What Is Internal Family Systems Therapy?
The idea that “the mind is not a singular entity or self, but is multiple, composed of parts” is at the core of Richard Schwartz’s internal family systems (IFS) model (Sweezy & Ziskind, 2013, p. xviii).
According to Schwartz (2021, p. 6), thinking involves parts “talking to each other and to you constantly about things you have to do or debating the best course of action, and so on.”
Each part has its own beliefs, feelings, and characteristics and a distinct role in the overall system. They are clustered into the following three groups (Sweezy & Ziskind, 2013; IFS Institute, n.d.):
- Managers
Managers are a protective group of parts that attempt to keep us organized and safe, running our day-to-day lives. Over time, they may push for perfectionism and even inflict harm in their pursuit of safety.
- Exiles
Exiles are the injured parts of us and have typically experienced trauma. Exiled by the managers, they can become increasingly extreme, ultimately overriding the managers to become who we are.
- Firefighters
Firefighters are another form of protection that “put out the emotional fire at any cost,” often starting backfires. They do so in several ways, including unhealthy or unhelpful behavior, such as alcohol and drug abuse and eating disorders (Sweezy & Ziskind, 2013, p. xviii).
Other theories relying on the single or mono-mind model may lead us to fear or dislike ourselves, believing “we only have one mind (full of primitive or sinful aspects) that we can’t control” (Schwartz, 2021, p. 12). Therapies based on this model often require clients to “correct irrational beliefs or meditate them away” (Schwartz, 2021, p. 12).
On the other hand, Schwartz’s IFS model argues that the ego comprises multiple parts trying to keep us safe. IFS Therapy finds ways to help our ego relax, allowing those parts of our personality we have buried (exiles) to ascend, freeing memories, emotions, and beliefs associated with them (burdens) that were previously locked away (Schwartz, 2021).
With this in mind, Schwartz’s (2021, p. 32) IFS Therapy has four goals:
- To liberate parts from the roles they have been forced into, freeing them to be who they were designed to be.
- To restore faith in the self and in self-leadership.
- To re-harmonize the inner system.
- To encourage the client to become increasingly self led in their interactions with the world.
While IFS Therapy is a powerful approach for helping individuals, it can be equally successful with couples. According to Herbine-Blank (n.d.), “once the individuals in a couple have more access to Self, transformation is natural,” and they can find the space and capacity to choose a response rather than simply react to it, even if the other cannot at the time.
Each partner is encouraged to bring compassion to their wounded inner parts and heal their past, gaining control over their present (Herbine-Blank, n.d.).
6 Internal Family Systems Therapy Worksheets
IFS Therapy helps clients form a deeply satisfying relationship with themselves and others, unburdening their trauma and accessing their self-energy (Herbine-Blank, n.d.).
While there are many aspects to IFS as a theory and treatment model, the primary healing relationship “is between the client’s Self and her young, injured parts” (Sweezy & Ziskind, 2013, p. 1).
The notion of parts is crucial to the IFS model. Therapy using the IFS model addresses and communicates with these parts, attempting to help the client find balance and harmony within their mind and elevate their self to the system’s leadership. To those unfamiliar with IFS Therapy, the language and conversation style may seem unusual, involving talking directly to the different parts of the self (IFS Institute, n.d.).
The following worksheets offer a range of tools for facilitating various aspects of this powerful and complex treatment to engage with and better understand the many parts of the self (modified from Anderson, Sweezy, & Schwartz, 2017; Sweezy & Ziskind, 2013; Schwartz, 2021):
All Parts Are Welcome
The All Parts Are Welcome exercise was created by Schwartz and his team to help the client welcome all parts of their self, using their attention and a few simple questions (Anderson et al., 2017).
The Six Fs
A key aspect of IFS Therapy is to “find, focus on and flesh out” the client’s protective parts and help them “unblend and notice the client’s Self” (Anderson et al., 2017, p. 93). Next, the client can recognize their feelings toward and befriend the target part, explore its fears, and invite it to do something new.
Experienced practitioners can use the Six Fs Internal Family Systems worksheet to successfully differentiate the protective parts from the self and form vital alliances.
What our readers think
I have been trying to unlock the secret to parts therapy for about a week now, and so far I cannot find a list or an inventory of the available parts. Does anyone have that list and can you share with me?
The client will come up with the name of the part. We can guide them in accessing the part, but the point is that the part will speak up and let the client know what it’s holding.
Thank you for making this available. I am enthusiastic about this model. I was in IFS therapy . Eventually the therapist referred me to another as he chose to train more people. Covid hit, and this therapist didn’t get past the first level in training. She is using DBR with me, which helps, but I believe this therapy is the best to use ongoing, as life continues on. I have noticed different parts of myself since I was a child and am relieved that it is a fact. My hope is to someday train and help others as well.
Hi Fran,
Thank you for sharing; it’s wonderful to hear how IFS has helped you make sense of your experience. Wishing you all the best on your journey!
Warm regards,
Julia | Community Manager
To me, I have a Masters degree and while understanding the concept, it seems convoluted. I would like to see a diagram as well.
That’s what I was going to say. I had someone try to use on it on me once but quit after the second time because I was confused. I have a Masters as well.
I heard about this type of therapy through Jessi Hildebrandt. Reading about the triggering person and letting go of your protection and walking in the room to be with that very person who is powerful and makes you small seems an awful lot like forgiveness in a new way. I don’t believe in forgiveness. The people you continually try with never change. Why would I enter a room to only be retraumatized over and over.
THis therapy is about you and your parts, not you and another person. So whatever that person tried to walk you through was not IFS.
Can you please diagram the parts, protectors, exiles, managers, firefighters, self, etc and how they interact? I am trying to visualize all of these. Thank you.
I’m doing IFS, and the diagrams are going to look different for each person. The book *No Bad Parts* is a good introduction to the theory and how to put it together.
But a personal example is, I have a manager part my therapist and I call Miss Piggy. Direct, if overdramatic. But when she gets too overbearing, a part we call “surfer man” comes in, and I start to dissociate rather than keep engaging with what Miss Piggy is saying. He’s a protector. So we’re working on letting surfer man help me calm down and stay engaged with the thoughts Miss Piggy is bringing forward.
The self in this model is the part of me that has the ability to observe my other parts and not directly identify with those thoughts. Like if you’ve ever had a really random thought and immediately gone, “where did that come from?” The self is the part saying “where did that come from?” with curiosity.
Does fabricating stories about internal imaginary personalities actually work as a therapy technique? What is the mechanism at work here?
Can someone please tell me some resources or ways to print out worksheets or tools? Any work books or tools that can help?
Hi Mirjana!
Are you looking for specific resources? Let me know what you are looking for. I am happy to give you some recommedations for books or send you some of our free worksheets 🙂
Kind regards,
Julia | Community Manager
Hi Julia, I’m not a therapist (though my wife is, and she has recommended IFS/re-construction of self to me). I live in Oakland and am looking for a psychotherapist with particular expertise in IFS, maybe L3 certified etc. Do you know of any people or resources that might help me find a good match? THANKS!
Hi Jeremy,
Psychology Today has a great directory you can use to find therapists in your local area. Usually, the therapists provide a summary in their profile with their areas of expertise and types of issues they are used to working with.
I hope this helps!
Kind regards,
Julia | Community Manager
Mirjana, The IFS steps detailed in this article are really great. Why not try some of those out first to see if it is what you want/need? (I clicked on the download links — they email them to you). For me personally, it’s been very beneficial because I grew up in a controlling household where my family wanted to make decisions. So in therapy the therapist demanding he reparent me was not good. IFS fixes that by giving you the power to reparent youself.
Thanks so much for your labor in putting this together!
excellent
I read your column here, and “The Path to Self” frightens me.
I *like* my parts, the ones I know. I don’t want to leave them behind. They are part of me. Most of the time I like them better than I like Me. Often the easiest way out of a situation is to blend with the right part. I’ve been helped by Ghost and Rebel several times that way.
Several of my parts over the years, have become Facets of Me. I can become Teacher or Explorer, or Wordsmith or Shutterbug at the drop of a hat.
Yes, I’ve had that reaction to the path exercise also, not wanting to leave the parts behind. The first time I heard it (in a level 1 training) my eyes shot open and I didn’t go any farther. When Dick leads this exercise he’s very careful to say “If it feels right to your system” several times, and he gives the option to just stay with the parts if that feels better. My system likes this better.
Thank you for this comment!
I think it’s helpful to know that there are no parts that are supposed to be left behind. I believe that would be impossible, and trying so would go against how we are composed. As the Richard Schwartz 2021 book says in the title “No Bad Parts”. The goal is to let go of the burdens of the exiles so that the ego/protector parts can fall back and into their natural roles where they are active or activated when needed. Opposed to being in an extreme role 24/7. The latter being taxing on our body. A couple of years ago I was working with a client who was letting go of a lot of grief. Then one day the client was exposed to manipulation by a partner where the client immediately reacted firmly without inner conflict. The client surprised asked her-/himself “where the heck did that come from?”. I think this is a good example of a manager-protector previously being occupied by protecting an exile to becoming free to stand up for the client. Previously this would not be possible, because leaving the position of protecting the exile to stand up for the client would have left the exiled part exposed. The exiled part now unburdened made the manager part free to do what it is supposed to do. Which is natural preservation of the person when needed.
When children, and grownups, are doing well and at peace they are anchored in their whole body and self with the ability to just observe with no thoughts at all, but all parts are present. At this moment here is no need for achievement, management, or protection, so no part is activated.
Yes this exactly. I’ve seen this unfettered response both in clients and in myself.
I still don’t fully grasp this parts perspective. I am brand new to parts therapy and I don’t seem to be getting very far. So, are parts like imaginary friends? How do I find my “parts?”