Presentation Schedule
Rising Above the Waters: Narrative Inquiry into the Rewriting of Family Legacies by Filipino Adults Triumphant over Intergenerational Poverty (107652)
Session Chair: Revenendo Vargas
Sunday, 10 May 2026 13:50
Session: Session 2
Room: Room G403 (4F)
Presentation Type: Oral Presentation
This study examines how Filipino adults have disrupted intergenerational poverty through their lived experiences using a qualitative narrative inquiry approach. Ten adults, aged 36–50, were purposively selected from urban and rural communities across the Philippines, representing diverse socioeconomic backgrounds from subsistence households to middle-class families. Participants were selected specifically for having achieved upward mobility despite intergenerational economic hardship. In-depth, semi-structured interviews explored how participants interpreted and navigated poverty across time, relationships, and places, shifting focus from economic metrics to relational and experiential dimensions. Anchored in Clandinin and Connelly’s three-dimensional narrative inquiry framework, findings are organized into four resonant threads, resilience, altruism, faith and formation, and tenacity, revealing recurring patterns across participants’ life stories. One participant, for example, described working multiple informal jobs to support siblings’ education while simultaneously caring for younger relatives, demonstrating resilience and altruism intertwined with faith and formation. Bowen Family Systems Theory was applied analytically to examine how family emotional processes, differentiation of self, and relational dynamics shaped their capacity for upward mobility. The findings highlight the relational and meaning-making aspects of poverty disruption and underscore the importance of culturally grounded, family-sensitive approaches. This study contributes to literature on poverty, family studies, and mental health by offering contextually rich insights relevant to counseling, education, and community-based interventions. By centering participants’ narratives, it illustrates how intergenerational legacies can be rewritten through perseverance, relational support, and intentional, informed life choices.
Authors:
Rodjan Sibal, Miriam College, Philippines
Gail Galang, Miriam College, Philippines
About the Presenter(s)
Rodjan C. Sibal is a licensed mental health counselor at ActiveOne Health Inc. Her interests include family systems, mental health, and qualitative research. Her current project involves disseminating her PhD dissertation on intergenerational poverty
Connect on Linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/rodjan-c-sibal-rgc-ph-d-cand-4a46441b6/
See this presentation on the full schedule – Sunday Schedule





Comments
Powered by WP LinkPress