Want to learn more about yourself? Interested in improving your relationships? Feeling lonely or disconnected?

Please come join a safe, fun, energizing group of your peers where you can explore how you relate to yourself and to others while receiving support and feedback.听Presenting issues vary widely from depression, anxiety and difficulties relating to/accepting self or others, issues of family conflict or abuse and more. Students who want to resolve specific concerns as well as those seeking personal growth are welcome. This can be a space to get your peers' perspectives on various issues and recognize that you are not the only one.

If you have any questions about group therapy, please contact CAPS Group Therapy Coordinator Dr. Tyler Ricci at 209.946.2315 x2 or tricci@pacific.edu.听


We currently offer both in-person (Stockton campus) and virtual groups (all three campuses).

GENERAL PROCESS GROUPS

The power of process groups lies in the unique opportunity to receive multiple perspectives, support, encouragement, and feedback from other individuals in a safe environment. The focus of these groups is to help you better understand yourself and others. Members of this group frequently talk about relationship concerns, family interactions, academic stressors, depression, anxiety, and how to handle the stress of being a student, friend, and partner to others.

Fall 2023:
This page will be updated when group days/times are established.


WISE MINDS

This group will teach crisis survival skills, help you identify and label your emotions, teach the skills to focus your mind, help you accept the current moment, learn how to identify and label emotions, and learn helpful strategies for asking what one needs, saying no and coping with conflict in relationships.

Fall 2023:
Thursdays, 4:00pm - 5:00pm, virtually

For more information, please contact CAPS Group Therapy Coordinator Dr. Tyler Ricci at 209.946.2315 x2 or tricci@pacific.edu.


MINDFUL UOP

This group offers a gradual and systematic introduction to the practice of mindfulness and meditation. Sustained practice cultivates the ability to be present in our moment-to-moment experience with greater awareness, acceptance, and understanding. This drop-in group allows for practice and discussion of various meditation practices, and well as education in how to incorporate it into daily activities.

Fall 2023:
Tuesdays, 5:00 - 6:00pm, Morris Chapel (Sears Hall), Room TBA

For more information,听please contact CAPS Group Therapy Coordinator Dr. Tyler Ricci at 209.946.2315 x2 or tricci@pacific.edu.

The initial sessions of a process group usually focus on the establishment of trust. During this time, the group therapists and group members work towards establishing a level of trust that allows them to communicate openly and honestly. In a climate of trust, people feel free to care about and help each other. New members are often amazed at how much their contributions help other members. 

Group trust is enhanced when all members make a commitment to the group. During the group meeting time, members are responsible for talking about what is troubling them.  Discussion flows according to what members want to talk about during that session rather than the group facilitators assigning a topic to discuss. Members are encouraged to give support and feedback to others, and to work with the reactions and responses that other members' contributions bring up for them.  Group members and group therapists may serve as models for effective communication, offer problem-solving strategies, and promote self-acceptance and self-support.

As individuals begin interacting freely with other group members, they usually re-experience or recreate some of the interpersonal difficulties that brought them to the group in the first place. Many of the reasons people seek help with personal issues usually stem from difficulties in their relationships with others. Under the skilled direction of a group facilitator, the group is able to point out troublesome interpersonal patterns by providing feedback and support and offering alternatives, and in such a way that the difficulty becomes resolved. Unexpressed feelings are a major reason why people experience difficulties and distress. Sharing your thoughts and feelings in a safe and supportive environment is an important part of group therapy and strongly affects how much you will be helped. The climate of trust provided by the group promotes an environment where members feel safe to share their struggles and work collaboratively to understand one another. As individuals increase their self-awareness, develop new ways of relating to people, and learn new adaptive behaviors, they make progress towards their personal goals that brought them to the group.

  • Be yourself.  Start from where you are, not how you think others want you to be.  This might mean asking questions, expressing anger, or communicating confusion and hopelessness.  Change begins with whatever you feel free to disclose.
  • Define goals.  Take time before each session to define your goals for that session.  Nevertheless, being flexible about your goals is also important.  You may be surprised to find that your goals continue to change throughout the group process.
  • Recognize and respect your pace for getting involved in the group.  Some group members will always be ready to disclose their thoughts and feelings; others need more time to gain feelings of trust and security. By respecting your needs you are learning self-acceptance.  If you are having a difficult time with how to discuss your problems with the group, then ask the group to help you.
  • Take time for yourself.  You have the right to take group time to talk about yourself.  Many people feel that other's issues are more important, while some have a difficult time facing feelings, or have fears of appearing "weak". By recognizing what the reluctance means, you begin the growth process.
  • Focus on what is most important to you.  Through talking about your concerns the group will help to recognize patterns.  With time being limited it is important to try focus on the main ideas, thoughts and feelings.  Focusing on minute details is often a way to avoid dealing with the key issue.
  • Recognize and express reactions and feelings.  Pay close attention to what you are feeling as you are sharing or others are sharing. If you are having difficulties recognizing and expressing your thoughts or feelings, ask the group to help.
  • Be aware of censored thoughts and feelings.  Learning to express thoughts and feelings, without censorship, enables exploration and resolution of interpersonal conflicts and self-affirmation and assertion. Try and take the risk to let yourself be emotionally available to and vulnerable with others.
  • Give and receive feedback.  Giving and receiving feedback can be a major component of your experience in group therapy. The purpose of feedback is to help others identify patterns, personal presentations, unrecognized attitudes, and inconsistencies.  Feedback can be one of the most effective ways to deepen any relationship.  
  • Avoid giving advice.  Sometimes we really want to offer advice to someone who is struggling, but often when we do, we fail to let that person feel heard. Most group members learn that giving advice, suggestions and solutions is seldom helpful.  For advice-givers, it takes time to learn how to express personal reactions, communicate understanding, give support, and listen attentively.
  • Take risks.  Experiment with different ways of behaving and expressing yourself.  By taking risks, you can discover what works for you and what doesn't.  This may mean expressing difficult feelings, sharing information you usually keep secret, or confronting someone about something upsetting to you.
  • Ask Questions.  If you are wondering about or confused about something that has just been said or has just occurred in the group, then seek clarification from group members or group facilitators. It's likely others may have the same questions that you have.
  • Become aware of distancing behaviors.  All of us have ways of behaving which prevent others from getting close to us.  Some of these are remaining silent and uninvolved, telling long involved stories, responding to others with intellectual statements, asking content questions, making hostile or indirect comments, and talking only about external events.  Keep in mind that distancing behaviors have had a purpose in the past.  The question you will face is whether the behavior is preventing you from getting what you want - close relationships with people.
  • Try to be as direct as possible and be open to the responses of others.  Telling a story is sometimes a way of being known, but it can also be a way of avoiding dialogue and intimacy.  Aim for dialogue that fosters an understanding of your experiences rather than monologue.
  • Remember that how people talk is as important as what they say.  Pay attention to the non-verbal behaviors in the group-yours and those of other members. Talk about what you notice.
  • Focus on the relationships you have with the group, other group members and the facilitator.  Put a priority on noticing what is happening inside the group.  What is going on that makes you feel closer or more distant towards others?  Try and explore with the group what you notice.
  • Work outside the group.  In order to get the most from the group experience, you will need to spend time between sessions thinking about yourself, trying out new behaviors, reflecting on what you are learning, reassessing your goals, and paying attention to your feelings and reactions.
  • Be patient with yourself.  Growth takes time, effort and patience.  Changing what has become such an integral part of ourselves is very difficult and slow.  By having patience with ourselves and accepting and understanding these blocks to growth, we set the foundation for growth and change.
  • Give the group time to develop.  It can take a number of sessions before members of a group begin to have sufficient trust and security to be open and honest, to disclose their concerns and feelings.  Thus, we encourage you to make a commitment to attend at least four sessions.  If you are not getting what you want out of the group, then talk about that with the group members.

When trying out new ways of interacting with others, the important thing is to do something that feels difficult.  Old, familiar ways of behaving will probably not result in productive experiments. Moreover, a new behavior may seem difficult at first, but with practice, it gets easier. Then the new behavior may be added to your repertoire-your range options-and it's available whenever you need it.

If you relate to people by: You might experiment with:
  • Complying, giving in, being self-effacing
  • Saying no
  • Resisting suggestions; holding back
  • Taking a risk; trying something new
  • Always talking; filling any silence with words because you feel uncomfortable
  • Being silent for a minute; getting in touch with uncomfortable feelings; talking about those feelings
  • Waiting for someone to say something, then reacting
  • Initiating something yourself, for someone else to react to
  • Always smiling, even when annoyed or angry
  • Talking without smiling
  • Explaining
  • Simply responding with what you feel (e.g., "I have an impulse to explain")
  • Trying to get people to stop feeling a certain way
  • Simply accepting the way they feel; at the same time exploring your impulses and feelings
  • Being polite; not showing anger or judgment
  • Being judgmental and angry, frankly and outrageously
  • Expressing anger easily
  • Checking to see what feelings are underneath the anger
  • Deflecting praise
  • Accepting praise and agreeing enthusiastically with it
  • Feeling bored but being too polite to say anything about it
  • Talking about your feelings of boredom
  • When attacked, defending yourself
  • Not saying anything in rebuttal & exploring the feelings you have
  • Being afraid and hiding your fear
  • Being openly afraid; letting everyone know it
  • Always complimenting others
  • Telling others exactly how you feel about them
  • Trying to get everybody to approve of you
  • Being what you are and not giving a damn what they think
  • Giving advice
  • Reporting "I feel like giving you advice" but not doing it
  • Always helping other people
  • Asking for help, letting yourself be helped
  • Always asking for help
  • Helping someone else
  • Controlling your feelings and suppressing them
  • Experiencing your feelings and exploring them
  • Keeping things secret
  • Disclosing something about yourself that is hard to say
  • Playing it safe
  • Taking a risk