top of page

Practicing socializing in group therapy is a path to healing old wounds.

Socializing is always a hot topic, today even more so. The way that our earliest caregivers communicate the outside world plays a significant role in our initial formation of how to listen, express empathy and navigate relationships. Group therapy offers a unique opportunity to practice unfamiliar behaviors and get feedback on how it feels to give and receive in relation to others. Our earliest experiences are filled with needs: hunger, warmth, safety, and rest. A lack of consistent responses from over-tired, inexperienced, depleted, and unavailable parents lead to imperfectly met needs. And yet it is the best that parents have to offer at that moment. Left with gaps in our needs, our internal nurturance is wired for longing on some very small or very large scale. As we begin to interact with the external world: family, playmates, neighbors, and strangers, we are barraged with messages: look this way, act that way, rules, expectations, models of behavior and more. These messages are grounded in gender, religion, ethnicity, culture, and economics. We pay a price when we strive to conform to society’s message of acceptability. Hiding our authentic, imperfect self elicits acceptance while invalidating all that feels most familiar and true. The energy that is required in presenting the “acceptable self” draws away from the energy needed to be present, available, listening, non-judgmental, empathetic, and safe. Trusting that you will be seen and accepted as your true self, requires practice. Healing your shame, fear, and exposed parts feel risky. Group therapy offers an environment where trust can be learned and established, mistakes are made and welcomed, and members hold each other in empathy. Imagining what it is like to be in another person’s world and how that might feel introduces the process of self-awareness of your feelings. Feelings are not facts, but they are real. And like the weather they come and go without our ability to make that happen. Feelings are reflexive. The thoughts and behaviors that follow are what we can notice and change. Exploring our feelings in group dialogue improves our listening skills. When we stop listening to respond and start listening to hear, everything slows down and the seeds for healing are sown. From these seeds empathy, validation, and change can blossom.

Recent Posts

See All
Is it possible to recover from betrayal?

8 things I want you to know about betrayal and repair Is it possible for a relationship to come back from the brink after a profound breach of trust? Can we survive a betrayal and find our way back to

 
 
 
Beyond the Quick Fix: Real Repair for Real Couples

Couples do not need to repair every conflict in three minutes to have a lasting relationship—but learning how to come back to each other, with less delay and more kindness, can transform the way love

 
 
 
From Surviving Love to Co‑Creating It

What Imago Taught Me About Real Connection For 25 years, I was married to an active alcoholic. I spent so many nights believing that if I just found the right words, used the gentle tone, picked the p

 
 
 

Comments


  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
Seal GoldHigh Red RGB.png

©2022 by Hayley Hoffman.

bottom of page