Carolyn Moynihan Bradt

October 2018     Oral Histories    

Interview with Andrea Schara, Sunday, June 9, 2013

Carolyn Moynihan Bradt
Courtesy of Carolyn Moynihan Bradt.

Transcript (full text, 106 kb)

In this interview, Carolyn Moynihan Bradt recalls her early experience learning from Dr. Bowen and the challenges posed by thinking systems in an individualistic educational setting. She describes Dr. Bowen’s mentoring style as not “huggy,” but rather challenging and provocative. From stories of Bowen from his family, she credits a lot of Dr. Bowen’s genius to his ability to be an observer from a young age, a naturalist. Ms. Bradt also discusses her husband, another student of Bowen, and how he lived as a self under his death. She reminisces about her work over the years on herself, from her family of origin, to her constant questioning, to her clinical work. She concludes with a story of his light-hearted ability to tease and use humor to evoke the intellect in others.

About Ms. Moynihan

Carolyn, second of six children, grew up in Iowa and California. After college in 1965, she went to graduate school in Washington, DC and met Murray Bowen at her clinical placement in the Department of Psychiatry at Georgetown University Hospital in 1966. She was part of the early team of residents and others who developed the Annual Family Theory Symposium, the Thursday night presentations, the Research Group on Change in Multiple Family Therapy conducted by Dr. Bowen, and eventually in 1969 founding faculty of the first Postgraduate Program in Family Systems Therapy. She was appointed to the faculty of the Department of Psychiatry in 1968, She was on the lecturing and supervising faculty and helped design and conduct the early sessions of the four times a year program (Special Postgraduate Program) for those training who were not local.

By 1977, she resigned from the faculty unable to continue the extensive volunteer hours and keep a balance between family and her salaried job as Clinical Director of the Groome Center and School which she co-founded and developed with her husband, Dr. Jack Bradt (married in 1974). After her relocation to Wisconsin in 1987, she remained actively involved with Dr. Bowen until his death.

Her work teaching at Georgetown University in Sociology and Psychiatry, lecturing nationally and in Canada, co-founding AFTA, teaching at the University of Wisconsin, and 50+ years of clinical consultation have been inspired by the application of Bowen Family Systems Theory. With Jack Bradt, she edited the first six years of the papers from the Georgetown Symposium into the publication Systems Therapy, 1972. It included the original research article, “The Child-Focused Family” which is still used as a training article. She also co-authored book chapters on “The Remarried Family” and “Invisible Women in Family Business.” She was scolded by Bowen but undeterred for being a lifelong feminist and fascinated by sociology and theology. She loves to sing and has four grown children and eight grandchildren. She still practices and may someday get it right. She does yoga. She was widowed in 2013 but still lives on 15 acres outside of Madison, Wisconsin.


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