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Group Dynamic Therapy

Group Dynamic Therapy is a unique treatment option developed by Dr. Laura Bologh, Ph. D. for treating and managing the relationship, conflict, personality, and narcissistic personality, addiction, cognitive, and anger issues that emerge when groups of individuals from different backgrounds are brought together and expected to operate as a single unit. 

Managing Conflict

10 Step process for managing the conflicts and everyday issues that often unnecessarily derail groups because they are not equipped with the tools they need to manage their anger and potentially self-destruction behavior.

Jazz Singer

Group Assessment

Dr. Bologh starts with an intake form and in-person meeting to assess the group dynamics, individual needs, and potential behavior, personality, and substance abuse issues that are impacting the group in the short-term in order to develop long-term, plans, and solutions.

Woman in a Studio

Sustainable Change

In-person visits, virtual check-ins, and consultations, as well as developing real coping skills that can be practiced and implemented as part of each participant's everyday life is our focus in order to bring about sustainable long-term change that will benefit participants inside and outside of the group. 

Band Practice
Friends Party
Drummer on Stage

Problem Solving as a Group

Group Dynamic Counseling and therapy are designed to help groups of individuals address and resolve various concerns, issues, and symptoms. These sessions, in particular, are intended to promote increased self-awareness, insight, and understanding, thereby enhancing the entire group's experiences for themselves and others.

 

The Group Dynamic approach is not only very effective at helping clients overcome barriers, but treatment can also help enhance many positive qualities of for the group, which work together to improve individual and group performances, quality of life balance, and individual issues such as self-esteem and compassion and enhancing joy, connection, and self-love.

 

During the course of the Group Dynamic counseling sessions, Laura provides support in a way that is different from how she normally interacts with her patients, in this setting she functions as a facilitator to help the group problem solve, work through and manage issues, and develop long-term plans and solutions. Although there is still a strong connection and bond between Dr. Bologh and the group, the group, band, team, board, or co-workers need to work together with her to create a safe environment where anything can be said and accepted as a building block for change. Laura provides objective support and aid to help the group map out their own constructive ways of coping with stress, negative feelings, and challenges.

Issues Included in Group Dynamic Therapy Sessions

45 Popham Road, Suite 1H, Scarsdale, NY, 10583

Laura@drlaurabologhcom

  • Relationship Issues

  • Self Esteem

  • Sleep or Insomnia

  • Stress

  • Mood Disorders

  • Personality Disorders

  • Inflexible behaviors  

  • Eating disorders

  • Life transitions

  • Narcissistic personality

  • Obsessive-Compulsive (OCD)

  • Oppositional defiance

  • Peer relationships

  • Video game addiction

  • Addiction

  • Depression

  • Anxiety

  • Burnout

  • Drug and alcohol dependence 

  • Bipolar disorder

  • Borderline personality

  • Codependency

  • Coping skills

  • Domestic abuse

  • Domestic violence

  • Conflict Resolution

  • Internet addiction

  • Grief

Tel : 914-725-3545

  • Group coaching

  • Life crisis

  • Self-esteem

  • Substance abuse

  • Dissociative disorders

  • Adult ADHD

  • Anger management

  • Gambling

  • Social Media

  • Suicidal ideation

Comfort Zones: Social groups are guided by rules—some more strongly than others.

By Devon Frye, published June 14, 2019 - last reviewed on July 2, 2019

Everyone knows a stickler for the rules, and probably some scofflaws, too. But how tightly social norms are adhered to varies at more than the individual level. A theory developed by University of Maryland psychologist Michele Gelfand and colleagues posits that groups, regions, and entire nations can be sorted on a spectrum from “tight” to “loose,” depending on how strongly their members value sticking to rules and norms. Though it’s just one way of assessing cultures, it could have implications for nationwide trends and individual well-being.

CREATIVE MEASURES

The U.S. has grown noticeably more tolerant over time. Researchers sought to gauge changes

 in tightness and looseness empirically by measuring the frequency of certain “tight” words (such as forbid and compel) and “loose” words (freedom and create) in published books. American culture appeared to loosen from 1800 to 2000, they found, with ups and downs along the way. Tighter periods were linked to measures of societal order—fewer teen pregnancies, less debt, and greater school attendance—but also higher crime rates (possibly, they speculate, due to greater enforcement). Looser times saw increases in markers of national creativity, including patent applications and films.

 

TIGHT SPOTS

How does tightness-looseness impact those who cross cultures? Research from Psychological Science

 examined how 889 exchange students fared as they traveled to and from 23 countries. Researchers found that students traveling from tighter cultures tended to adapt more easily than did those traveling from looser cultures; those traveling to tighter cultures struggled more to navigate new norms. “Culture is omnipresent and all around us, even though it’s invisible,” Gelfand says. “There can be a backlash when cultures collide.” Yet individual personalities also made a difference: Students with higher agreeableness and humility adapted to tight places just as well as those who visited loose locales.

LOOSE LEADERS

No matter how dearly societies value rules, violations still occur. How does culture affect how violators are perceived? In a third study, more than 2,300 participants in 19 countries reacted to a vignette in which someone either followed or strayed from established workplace norms. In tighter cultures, those who followed norms tended to be seen as better potential leaders. Past research on this effect was done in the looser U.S., Gelfand says, where rule-breakers are seen as powerful. “But norm violations aren’t automatically celebrated across the world.”

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Dr. Laura Bologh, Ph. D., Licensed Clinical Psychologist Therapist, serving Scarsdale, White Plains, Westchester, Manhattan, NY, New York Metro Area. 45 Popham Rd Suite 1H, Scarsdale, NY 10583. EMAIL: DrLauraBologh@Yahoo.com, 914-725-3545

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PATIENT TESTIMONIAL

4.5 OUT OF 5 RATING

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