The helpfulness of spiritually influenced group work in developing self-awareness and self-esteem: a preliminary investigation.

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Abstract

This paper discusses an exploratory study that investigated the helpfulness of spiritually influenced group work with eight adult women who shared a history of substance abuse. The overall purpose of the group was to help participants develop their self-awareness and self-esteem. The group, which was contextualized in transpersonal theory, was organized around the following themes and experiential exercises: meditation, mindfulness practice, dream work, stream of consciousness writing, the shadow self, and other arts-based processes. Grounded-theory analysis of group sessions and individual interviews with the participants found that the participants perceived the group to be helpful in developing their self-awareness and self-esteem. While the participants identified different aspects of the group as spiritual, making-meaning was one practice that was consistently described as a spiritually sensitive process. The results of this study in this emergent field are promising and suggestions are provided for future research.

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Coholic, D. (2005). The helpfulness of spiritually influenced group work in developing self-awareness and self-esteem: a preliminary investigation. TheScientificWorldJournal, 5, 789–802. https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2005.99

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