Our
Vision, Mission and Values
- Integrity
- Teamwork
- Dignity
- Excellence
- Inclusion
Vision, Mission and Values
Sociotherapy is conducted in groups of ten to fifteen people.
CBS group serves as a therapeutic medium and groups are facilitated by skilled facilitators who are members of the community.
These groups meet weekly for
about three hours over fifteen weeks in a safe and familiar environment, which can range from schools and churches to private homes or outdoor spaces. Two trained sociotherapy facilitators guide the groups through the phases
of “safety, trust, care, respect, new life orientations, and memories of emotions.”
The process is governed by seven principles: “interest, equality, democracy, participation, responsibility, learning-by-doing, and here-and-now.”
Due to the feelings of unsafety that many war-afflicted sociotherapy participants report, sociotherapy facilitators must first of all create safety. This is done by providing structure, using social activities in the group, but also discussing the meaning of safety to the participants and their social environment.
The second phase, “trust,” presents itself when safety is increased in the sociotherapy group. The aim of the second phase is for participants to regain their ability to trust, which is especially important for those who have experienced trauma. A vital precondition for creating a supportive and healing group environment.
The focus in this phase is on helping those who have had difficult experiences and struggle to take care of themselves or others. The hardship people have gone through are expressed in various ways. Distinctive expressions of care involve reflection and increased caring behaviour in the sense of looking after each other and forms of self-care.
Increasingly felt certainty to safety, trust and care, allows the expression of tensions that have arisen over cultural differences regarding respect. While maintaining the support structure and trust in the group, the facilitators bring the subject respect to the group, allowing people to express their desire specific forms of respect, related to present-day reality.
During the fifth phase, there is room for future-oriented discussions. Often this includes the wish of participants to have a say in the rules of the institutions that govern the basic structure of the participants communal life. By emphasizing the variation of rules (for instance in games), the sociotherapy facilitators enable participants to reflect on effective ways of exercising control.
In the last phase participants are clear about the reliability of the sociotherapy group and therefore favourable conditions arise for deciding whether or not to proceed to a more in-depth manner of processing traumatic emotions. By discussing both good and bad memories, participants find new ways to understand their past experiences. From here, one can be decide whether help from a specialist is desired.