A Model of Healthy Functioning Families and Individuals
- Norman L. Coad D. M.
- Nov 6
- 4 min read
The Following Is a Description of a Healthy Family Based on Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.
A need is something you have to have to be healthy, and as such, it is not optional. While a need may be unmet and a person or family may survive for a while, it is like subsisting on a substandard diet. One ends up malnourished. Needs are not to be confused with wants. A want is a wish or desire for something, a craving. As those who deal with alcohol and drug addicted people, a craving is not a need. Diener and Tay proved Maslow was right. There are universal human needs.[1]
As the word “hierarchy” suggests, the needs are placed in an ascending scale of
importance even though they are all interdependent and necessary. People tend to
achieve basic safety needs before other higher needs.[2] Maslow himself wrote that
the relationship between different human needs and behavior are often motivated
simultaneously by multiple needs. (See A. Maslow, Motivation and Personality,
Harper & Row, New York, NY. 1987, p.51.) [3]
It should be noted that while the author uses biblical language in his description of the
needs, Maslow was an atheist and differed from Freud in that he, Freud, considered
spirituality as a guide to direct behavior.[4]
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs has been interpreted as a pyramid with the mere basic
needs at the bottom.[5] But meeting these needs may occur simultaneously.[6]
Physiological Needs include breath, food, water, sex, sleep, homeostasis (to resist or
slow down change), and excretion (to separate waste material from the blood, tissue
and from the body).
Safety Needs—Security, order, stability of the body and emotional/psychological
well-being of the individual. Aids to this include employment, resources, morality, the
family, health and prosperity.
Love and Belonging Needs—Love is unconditional. It includes love of self and the
experience of love in family and among friends. It also includes sexual intimacy with
the right person, at the right time of a person’s life and for the right reasons. It is not
to be forced, violent or immoral. It includes belonging needs: to relate, to be
connected to, to be a part of, and to have a close affinity for those with whom one is
related, as in, these are my people. This is my place. This is with whom, and where, I
belong.
Esteem Needs—include self-esteem, believing and accepting oneself to be precious,
of high worth and value, feeling and acting in a self-confident manner. This is to have
a full belief in, being fully assured of and certain in one’s position, authority and role,
to function successfully. Being free to achieve, while showing respect for self and
others, all the while being respected by others and intimates. Wives respect your
husband by submitting to him. Husbands love, sacrifice and provide for your wife
sacrificially, even as Christ loves the body of Christ. (Ephesians 6:23-33)
Self-Actualization Needs—include the ability to fully achieve, the freedom and
confidence to move yourself to, or successfully to attain by effort, self-discipline,
practice and skill, to be all that you have potential to be and to accomplish all that God
created you to do. It is being and doing.
In order to be self-actualized one must be free to succeed or fail without loss of
prestige. There are two common sayings that express this thought, If at first you don’t
succeed, try, try again. A spin-off of this is, If at first you don’t succeed, you are like
most other people. Failures occur in all new endeavors. One should not be diminished
by mistakes but should take them in stride and learn from them. If you are afraid of
failure, you will not try new and different things and will not develop and achieve.
The characteristics that Maslow developed in self-actualization where what he
observed in people who achieved and were positive and healthy in their view of life.
Morality—those in whom their character is in accord with principles and standards of
right conduct and virtue.
Creativity—the ability to form something new by observation or intellectual effort or
combining things already known in a different manner or processing to create
something new.
Spontaneity—behavior that arises out of natural feeling, temperament and disposition
without compulsion, constraint or premeditation.Problem Solving—the ability to provide a satisfactory answer to a question, matter,
situation or person to resolve a difficulty or something that must be done.
Prejudice is making a judgment or forming an opinion before the facts are known. It
is acting on a preconceived idea.
Acceptance of Facts—to believe and recognize that something is reality. It is truth
that something really is and that its consequences and benefits are real.
Families provide the framework so that the family as a whole and the individuals in it
may realize the five groups of needs in their lives. No families do this perfectly.
Dysfunctional families usually do not provide the structure to attain anything more
than the physical needs in level one. Healthy families do their best to see that the five
basic needs are met in all. Love covers a multitude of sins. (I Peter 4:8)
NOTES
1. https://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham Maslow
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
For more information and help check out Dr. Coad’s book, The Divided Soul in the
Book Store.
Category: Norman's Place
Tag: Multiple Personality Disorder





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