The idea of talking about your problems in front of strangers can seem terrifying. Why would anyone choose group therapy when they could have the privacy of individual sessions? But those who’ve experienced group therapy often describe it as transformative in ways that individual therapy alone couldn’t achieve.
Group therapy offers something unique: the experience of being truly seen and understood by others who share your struggles. It provides a living laboratory for practicing new relationship skills and a powerful antidote to the isolation that often accompanies mental health challenges.
What Is Group Therapy?
Understanding the format.
Definition
What it involves:
- Therapy conducted with multiple clients together
- Led by one or more trained therapists
- Focused on specific issues or general support
- Regular meetings over time
- Therapeutic community
Different Types
Various formats:
- Psychoeducational groups (learning-focused)
- Process groups (interpersonal exploration)
- Support groups (mutual support)
- Skills groups (DBT, CBT-based)
- Specialized groups (grief, addiction, trauma)
Size and Structure
Typical setup:
- Usually 6-12 members
- Meets weekly or biweekly
- Sessions 60-90 minutes typically
- Closed or open membership
- Structured or less structured
Professional Facilitation
The leader’s role:
- Licensed mental health professional
- Guides the process
- Ensures safety
- Facilitates interaction
- Different from peer support groups
How Group Therapy Works
The mechanisms of change.
Universality
You’re not alone:
- Discover others share your struggles
- Reduces shame and isolation
- “I’m not the only one”
- Normalizing experience
- Powerful healing factor
Interpersonal Learning
Relationship laboratory:
- Practice new relationship skills
- Get feedback from peers
- See yourself through others’ eyes
- Real-time relationship dynamics
- Learn how you come across
Instillation of Hope
Seeing others improve:
- Witness others’ progress
- If they can, maybe you can too
- Hope through observation
- Inspiration from peers
- Recovery is possible
Altruism
Helping others helps you:
- Being useful to others
- Giving support matters
- Boosts self-esteem
- You have value to offer
- Helping is healing
Group Cohesion
Belonging:
- Feeling part of something
- Acceptance from the group
- Sense of belonging
- Connection and community
- Powerful in itself
Corrective Experience
Rewriting old patterns:
- Group becomes like family
- Work through old patterns
- Different outcomes this time
- Corrective relational experience
- Healing old wounds
Modeling
Learning from others:
- Watch how others cope
- See different approaches
- Learn from others’ experiences
- Multiple perspectives
- Diverse coping strategies
Benefits of Group Therapy
What it uniquely offers.
Breaks Isolation
Connection heals:
- Mental health issues isolate
- Group provides community
- You’re understood
- Regular social contact
- Combat loneliness
Multiple Perspectives
Diverse input:
- Many viewpoints, not just one
- Different experiences and wisdom
- Broader feedback
- What works for others
- Rich input
Social Skills Practice
Safe practice:
- Real relationships to work in
- Immediate feedback
- Try new behaviors
- Low-stakes environment
- Skills generalize
Normalization
Reducing shame:
- Others struggle too
- Your problems aren’t unique
- Shame decreases
- Self-acceptance grows
- Part of human experience
Cost-Effective
Financial benefit:
- Usually less expensive than individual
- More therapy for your dollar
- Insurance often covers
- Accessible option
- Economic advantage
Accountability
Others notice:
- Group holds you accountable
- Commitment to others
- Showing up matters
- Motivation from group
- Positive peer pressure
Support Network
Beyond sessions:
- Connections that extend
- Support outside therapy
- Community forms
- Lasting relationships possible
- Extended support system
Types of Group Therapy
Different approaches.
Process Groups
Interpersonal focus:
- Explores relationships within group
- Here-and-now emphasis
- How you relate to others
- Deep interpersonal work
- Less structured
Psychoeducational Groups
Learning focused:
- Information and skills
- Structured curriculum
- Specific topics
- Education component
- Skills practice
Skills Training Groups
Building specific skills:
- DBT skills groups
- CBT-based groups
- Concrete skill building
- Homework and practice
- Structured approach
Support Groups
Mutual support:
- Specific issues (grief, divorce, etc.)
- Shared experience focus
- Peer support emphasis
- May be peer-led
- Community connection
Specialized Groups
Focused populations:
- Trauma groups
- Addiction groups
- Eating disorder groups
- Anxiety groups
- Many specializations
Online Groups
Virtual format:
- Video-based group therapy
- Accessibility advantage
- Similar dynamics
- Technology-mediated
- Growing option
What to Expect in Group Therapy
The experience.
Screening and Preparation
Before joining:
- Individual meeting with leader
- Assessment of fit
- Preparation for group
- Orientation to expectations
- Ensuring appropriate match
Early Sessions
Getting started:
- Introductions and establishing norms
- Building safety
- Getting comfortable
- Finding your place
- Group forming
Ongoing Sessions
The rhythm:
- Check-ins often
- Discussion and sharing
- Feedback and processing
- Working through issues
- Regular attendance expected
Group Norms
Expected behaviors:
- Confidentiality required
- Respect for others
- Regular attendance
- Active participation
- Honesty
The Leader’s Role
What therapist does:
- Facilitates discussion
- Ensures safety
- Guides process
- Intervenes when needed
- Balances participation
Your Role
What’s expected of you:
- Share when comfortable
- Listen to others
- Give feedback when appropriate
- Attend regularly
- Participate actively
Overcoming Fears About Group Therapy
Common concerns.
“I Can’t Talk in Front of Others”
Anxiety about sharing:
- You can share at your own pace
- No requirement to share everything
- Listening is valuable too
- Comfort grows over time
- Leaders help manage this
“What If I Don’t Like the Other Members?”
Group composition:
- You don’t have to like everyone
- That’s part of the work
- Resembles real life
- Learning to work with different people
- Growth opportunity
“Confidentiality Concerns”
Privacy worries:
- Confidentiality is group norm
- Members commit to privacy
- Leaders address breaches
- Trust develops
- Taken seriously
“Others’ Problems Will Burden Me”
Taking on others’ pain:
- Healthy boundaries addressed
- You can learn from others without absorbing
- Not responsible for fixing others
- Part of therapeutic process
- Limits maintained
“My Problems Are Too Embarrassing”
Shame about issues:
- Others have similar struggles
- Shame decreases when shared
- Group members are understanding
- What seems shameful often isn’t
- Relief in sharing
“I’ll Be Judged”
Fear of judgment:
- Groups tend to be supportive
- Members understand struggle
- Less judgment than feared
- Acceptance is common
- Safe space created
Group Therapy vs. Individual Therapy
Comparing approaches.
Different Benefits
What each offers:
- Individual: private, deep, personalized
- Group: connection, multiple perspectives, real-time relationships
- Both valuable
- Often complement each other
- Different mechanisms
Can Be Combined
Not either/or:
- Many people do both
- Individual for personal work
- Group for interpersonal
- Synergistic effects
- Complementary
When Group Is Better
Unique advantages:
- Isolation is the problem
- Relationship skills needed
- Normalization important
- Cost a factor
- Community needed
When Individual Is Better
Private work needed:
- Deep personal exploration
- Privacy essential
- Severe crisis
- Not ready for group
- Personal preference
Finding a Group
How to locate one.
Ask Your Therapist
If you have one:
- They may run groups
- Can recommend groups
- Know local options
- Best referral source
- Coordination possible
Community Mental Health Centers
Accessible options:
- Often run groups
- Various topics
- Sliding scale fees
- May have waitlists
- Community resource
Hospitals and Clinics
Treatment settings:
- Outpatient groups
- Specialty programs
- Intensive outpatient
- Partial hospitalization
- More structured settings
Private Practice
Group practitioners:
- Many therapists run groups
- Psychology Today listings
- Specialty groups
- Various orientations
- Direct contact
Online Groups
Virtual options:
- Platform-based groups
- Therapist-led online
- Increased accessibility
- Growing options
- Same therapeutic value
Making the Most of Group Therapy
Getting full benefit.
Attend Regularly
Consistency matters:
- Attendance is essential
- Group depends on members showing up
- Commitment helps everyone
- Irregular attendance disrupts
- Make it a priority
Participate Actively
Engage:
- Share when you can
- Give feedback to others
- Be honest
- Take risks
- Growth requires engagement
Be Patient
Trust the process:
- Takes time to feel comfortable
- Group develops over time
- Benefits compound
- Don’t give up early
- Give it a chance
Be Honest
Authenticity essential:
- Share truthfully
- Don’t just present well
- Authentic connection requires honesty
- The group can handle it
- Honesty enables growth
Take Risks
Push your edge:
- Try new behaviors
- Share something hard
- Give honest feedback
- Step outside comfort zone
- Growth requires risk
Apply Outside Group
Generalize learning:
- Use skills in daily life
- Practice between sessions
- Notice patterns outside group
- Apply insights
- Real life is the goal
The Transformative Power of Groups
There’s something uniquely powerful about being truly seen by others who understand your struggles. The shame that thrives in secrecy dissolves when you share and find acceptance. The isolation that compounds mental health difficulties lifts when you realize you’re not alone. The relationship skills you need in life can be practiced and refined in the safe laboratory of the group.
Group therapy isn’t just a cost-effective alternative to individual therapy—it offers benefits that individual therapy simply cannot. The healing that comes from helping others, the hope that comes from watching others improve, the belonging that comes from true community—these are group-specific therapeutic factors.
If you’ve been hesitant about group therapy, consider giving it a try. Many people find it intimidating at first and transformative in the end. The connections formed in group can be profound, and the insights gained from multiple perspectives can illuminate blind spots that individual therapy alone might miss.
You don’t have to heal alone. In fact, healing together might be exactly what you need.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re interested in group therapy, please consult with a qualified mental health provider to determine if it’s appropriate for your needs.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
If you'd like support in working through these issues, I'm here to help.
Schedule a Session