The New Social Worker Vol. 20, No. 1, Winter 2013 | Page 12

Groups I A Good Group Runs Itself—and Other Myths by Renee R. Zandee-Adams, MSW, LCSW am not a “group” person. Don’t get me wrong. I understand the therapeutic value of the group, as well as the stages of group development for both the group and the leader. I have excelled in my academic study of group work and successfully participated in countless role plays in the presence of both peers and mentors throughout my entire academic career. However, I must confess, there are many, many things I wish I had known before beginning my first support group for caregivers of individuals residing in a skilled nursing facility. In the same way that knowing how a car operates does not make one a good driver, earning a master’s degree in social work and studying the group process in depth does not necessarily make one a good facilitator. I believe that the skills needed to effectively facilitate a group are often highly underrated. I also believe that it is often assumed that if you are intelligent and have people skills, you can run a group. I have been present in groups as both observer and participant and generally have left with a less than satisfied feeling and secretly wondered if others felt the same way. This leads me to believe that I was not alone in my lack of preparedness and lack of respect for the true work and skill needed to be a good facilitator. As professionals, we desire the best for our clients. We want to provide them with the tools to navigate their way through whatever situation they may be struggling with and achieve their “healthiest selves.” Because of this, I am going to share the pitfalls that I ran into as a new facilitator and hope to prevent you from experiencing the same. I am going to share the biggest misconceptions that I held about the group dynamic and how these misconceptions affected my group, its development, and its therapeutic value. First and foremost was my belief that a “good” group essen- tially “runs itself” followed by the belief that my dual role as both Social Service Director and support group facilitator would somehow be beneficial to both the group and the facility for which I was employed and, lastly, my belief that all participants, at their core, have a similar goal of supporting and respecting one another. I have heard, for years, from many respected individuals, that “the group essentially runs itself.” The problem with this belief is that, for many, it minimizes the true importance of preparation. I clung to this misconception as I decided to develop my first caregiver support group where I worked as a Social Service Director in a skilled nursing facility. Having worked as a Skilled Nursing Facility Director for four years, I identified a great need for in-house support for the family members of patients living there. Generally, this population of caregivers spent much of their day in the nursing home and either didn’t have the energy or the time to attend an off-site support group. My solution was to offer a group on Saturdays, on-site, in a safe, convenient, and familiar setting. I followed the recipe for any successful group. I posted flyers, mailed out personal invitations, collected various resource materials and handouts, reserved a private area, and bought doughnuts. The RSVPs were rolling in, and I had a surprisingly hefty group of approximately 15 caregivers. As the attendees were seated and settled, I explained what I perceived to be the purpose of the group, reviewed some general guidelines and expectations, and asked that everyone introduce themselves. So far so good. I then opened the floor and asked if anyone had anything specific that he/she wanted to share. Silence—not the silence that gently pushes one to deeper insight, but the awkward silence when no one really knows what to say or how to begin or end. Possibly, in an effort to end the awkward silence, or maybe because the attendees had an agenda quite different from my own, the support group transformed itself into a forum for voicing complaints. There were complaints about care, policies, administration, and departments. In my inexperience, I felt outnumbered, and my attempts at redirection—the ones that served me so 10 Winter 2013 The New Social Worker well in my one-on-one practice—seemed to fail me in this setting. Another misconception that I had about facilitating a group was that my being a Director at the same facility where I was facilitating the group was inherently positive. I had worked for four years as a Social Service Director in this facility. I served residents, their families, and the community while simultaneously representing the facility. Initially, I thought this would be a win-win situation. Even the facility administrator was hopeful that the group would be so successful that it might generate referrals from the community. The problem was that the surroundings, and I, were too comfortable. It was just too easy to ask me a “quick” question. It seemed too difficult to expect the group members to view me as a facilitator when I may have just helped them apply for financial resources, select a mortuary, or locate lost dentures just a day before! Quite frankly, I, too, struggled with the required shifting of gears. I also felt somewhat guarded in what I said, or what I encouraged others to talk about. Some of their complaints/ concerns were valid, but I believed that by somehow agreeing with them, I was indirectly turning my back on the facility where I worked. 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