There are millions of people around the world who struggle with anxiety and are looking for anxiety help. Group behaviors are often quite unsettling for individuals with acute anxiety disorders. These people often struggle to simply be present, and serene, around other people. For such individuals, anxiety, in order to be conquered must be spoken of and put out into the light. I believe that group therapy is just the prescription for people who are suffering from an anxiety disorder.
I believe there a many excellent rationales for why an individual should be recommended to this type of treatment. Among the most common reasons that group therapy can be recommended for people suffering from anxiety is that:
- Group therapy interactions can be examined in detail breaking down the specific feelings that you experienced while participating in the intervention.
- Group therapy brings the talents of a trained facilitator to the fore while addressing the anxiety brought up for the patients by being in a social setting.
- Group therapy allows individuals with social anxiety to interact with others in the presence of a trained mediator who can make certain that stimulus levels do not reach overload.
Considering these facts, let us take a moment to examine why group therapy should be a treatment methodology of choice for patients of anxiety disorders. Anxiety can be a crippling affliction, however it is one that gets its power from being in the shadows. Like many other pathologies, including compulsive gambling, anxiety gets worse when it is kept as a secret. When anxiety is confronted, and called out into the open, it loses much of its power. Unfortunately, for people who suffer from anxiety, the anxiety symptoms are often very over powering and cause a deep shame since they inhibit normal function so severely. In layman’s terms, an anxiety attack is an embarrassing ordeal and the sufferers of anxiety go through great lengths to conceal their anxiety from others in order to avoid that embarrassment. Group therapy allows the sufferer to shine a light onto their anxiety thus reducing its power.
I have seen individuals who are so socially inept that they do not attend any social functions and have no friends come to grips with their social anxiety by facing it in the presence of a group therapist. They are forced, and this can be extremely uncomfortable, to sit in a crowded room and interact with people who they may not know well. These people often produce great anxiety in the patient However, in time, they become accustomed to interacting with them and are able to do so with less severe anxiety symptoms.
However, while simply interacting socially in a safe environment can have many benefits for people who suffer from social anxiety, the true benefit of group therapy occurs when anxiety comes up for the patient during the session. Because anxiety is so often kept in the shadows, very infrequently do these people ever get the chance to talk about their anxiety while it is happening. However, with group therapy there is the opportunity, with a therapist, to discuss the anxiety symptoms in plain sight of everyone else and to do so in an emotionally safe fashion. Because of this, the anxiety symptoms, through a process that can be difficult to describe, actually diminish greatly. Talking about anxiety has the effect of limiting the power of the anxiety. But, since the stigma associated with anxiety is so potent, individuals rarely get a chance to discuss openly because they simply do not feel comfortable to do so. As a result the anxiety, thriving in the shadows only grows stronger. Therefore, it is the frank discussion of the anxiety in value neutral setting that causes the patient to see a decrease in anxiety symptoms in their outside life.
Diseases, Conditions and Treatments • June 2nd, 2009 •