The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation
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 wa...
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Series: | The Scientific World Journal |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2005.99 |
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doaj-eee2383256b641a6934510390605a6ff2020-11-25T00:55:55ZengHindawi LimitedThe Scientific World Journal1537-744X2005-01-01578980210.1100/tsw.2005.99The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary InvestigationDiana Coholic0Laurentian University School of Social Work, Sudbury, Ontario, CanadaThis 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.http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2005.99 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Diana Coholic |
spellingShingle |
Diana Coholic The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation The Scientific World Journal |
author_facet |
Diana Coholic |
author_sort |
Diana Coholic |
title |
The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation |
title_short |
The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation |
title_full |
The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation |
title_fullStr |
The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Helpfulness of Spiritually Influenced Group Work in Developing Self-Awareness and Self-Esteem: A Preliminary Investigation |
title_sort |
helpfulness of spiritually influenced group work in developing self-awareness and self-esteem: a preliminary investigation |
publisher |
Hindawi Limited |
series |
The Scientific World Journal |
issn |
1537-744X |
publishDate |
2005-01-01 |
description |
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. |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2005.99 |
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