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Group Activities for Families in Recovery
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Group Activities for Families in Recovery



December 2012 | 256 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Group Activities for Families in Recovery offers therapists a wealth of activities designed to help families struggling with addiction address problem areas of functioning, and ultimately shift from dysfunctional patterns to healthy living. Written by expert practitioners in family-oriented substance abuse treatment programs, this text focuses on group therapy as a key component to treatment.

Beginning with a brief overview of the issues involved in working from a systemic family therapy perspective of addiction, the text discusses practical guidelines for working with families in groups and how to best utilize the exercise in the book. The collection of 30 group activities are suitable for a variety of family-oriented substance abuse treatment groups. They are divided into seven sections covering the key issues of:

1. Family Structure
2. Family Identity
3. Sober Fun
4. Toward Health
5. Anger Management
6. Healthy Communication
7. Parenting

The activities are varied and include topics presented through expressive arts (drawing, writing, acting), game-playing, problem solving, enactments, worksheets, and roleplaying. The activities can be used individually, incorporated into another program, or stand alone as a 16-week (or longer) program. They can also be adapted for use in groups where children or present, or for adult-family groups.

 
Part 1: Introduction
Whole and Parts

 
Origins

 
Assumption

 
Everyone is impacted

 
Learn from listening and watching

 
Child Focus

 
Healthy caring not enabling

 
Families and Substance Abuse – A Brief Overview

 
Roles

 
Rules

 
Boundaries

 
Family ‘Esprit de Corps’ (collective 'sense of self')

 
 
Part 2: Structure of Family Group For Families With Substance Abuse
Structure

 
Recruitment

 
Dual diagnosis

 
Session length

 
Screening

 
Process and Structure of Therapy

 
Avoiding resistance

 
Locus of control from external to internal

 
Confidentiality, legal and ethical issues

 
Working With Expressive Arts

 
Working With Blended and Diverse Families

 
Group leadership

 
Interns

 
 
Part 3: The Curriculum
 
Curriculum Section 1: Family Structure
1-1 Family Roles

 
1-2 Impact of Addiction on Family

 
1-3 How We Experience our Family

 
1-4 Family Cycles & History

 
 
Curriculum Section 2: Family Identity
2-1 Family Identity I: Who We Think We Are

 
2-2 Family Identity II: Structure

 
2-3 Family Identity III: Who We Feel We Are

 
2-4 Family Drawing

 
 
Curriculum Section 3: Sober Fun
3-1 Family Fun

 
3-2 Playing Together

 
 
Curriculum Section 4: Towards Health
4-1 Healthy Helping

 
4-2 Doing It Differently

 
4-3 Relationships I – Healthy or Unhealthy?

 
4-4 Relationships II – Choosing a Relationship

 
4-5 Relationships III – Stages In Relationships

 
4-6 Private or Secret?

 
4-7 Families in Recovery I

 
4-8 Families In Recovery II

 
4-9 Healing Families

 
4-10 What Could Be Better?

 
4-11 Rebuilding Trust

 
4-12 Building Life-Long, Healthy Supports I

 
4-13 Building Life-Long, Healthy Supports II

 
4-14 Spirituality

 
4-15 Rules in Families

 
 
Curriculum Section 5: Anger
5-1 Anger in My Family

 
5-2 Strategies to Manage Anger

 
5-3 Conflict in My Family

 
5-4 Making Arguing Work

 
 
Curriculum Section 6: Communication
6-1 Working Together

 
6-2 Assertive Communication

 
6-3 What We Haven’t Said

 
6-4 Our Different Experiences

 
6-5 Do You Hear Me?

 
6-6 We Are Grateful

 
6-7 Resentments – Taking Back the Power

 
 
Curriculum Section 7: Parenting
7-1 When Daddy Drinks

 
7-2 What About the Kids?

 
7-3 What Do We Tell the Kids?

 
7-4 Consequence With Empathy

 

Sample Materials & Chapters

Table of Contents

Part 1


Sage College Publishing

You can purchase this book and request an instructor sample on our US College site:

Go To College Site

This title is also available on SAGE Knowledge, the ultimate social sciences online library. If your library doesn’t have access, ask your librarian to start a trial.