Recovery Groups
Small, clinician-led groups offering structured, confidential recovery support
Men’s Recovery Groups
Structured, confidential ,supporting honesty, accountability, and relational recovery
Men’s Recovery Groups are small, clinician-led groups offering structured, confidential support for professionals navigating sexual addiction, compulsive behavior, betrayal, relational disconnection, and the internal struggles that pull them out of alignment with their values. These groups provide a steady, respectful space grounded in honesty, accountability, and emotional development, where men move out of isolation and secrecy and into relational engagement. Each facilitated meeting allows for thoughtful cross-talk, direct reflection, and focused themes that address real recovery and intimacy challenges. Designed to complement individual therapy and other recovery supports, these groups offer a relational practice space where insight, boundaries, emotional awareness, and secure attachment can be strengthened over time.
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Group Overview
The men’s groups offer a private, steady, and respectful space for working professionals navigating sexual addiction, compulsive behavior, betrayal, relational disconnection, or the inner struggles that pull them out of alignment with their values.
Each group is a community of men committed to honesty, accountability, emotional development, and relational growth.
Each group meeting is facilitated and allows for participants to engage in cross talk and supportive interaction that address personal recovery challenges, focus areas, and themes presented. Each meeting provides space for direct engagement, honest reflection, and grounded conversation. It is a practice space — a circle where men learn to step out of isolation and secrecy, understand their protectors, build emotional awareness, strengthen boundaries, and grow secure attachment within themselves and with others.
The work blends Attachment Theory, Internal Family Systems (IFS), Gestalt relational contact, Jungian inquiry into masculine protector archetypes, mindfulness, present-centered emotional practice, trauma-informed sexual addiction recovery, and honest, direct dialogue.
These groups are designed to complement individual recovery therapy and other recovery groups, providing a relational setting where men can apply, practice, and integrate their recovery work.
Schedule
The men’s group meets every other week, each 1.5 hours in length.
If you are interested in joining a recovery group and would like more details about schedule, group rates, availability, or the group process, please contact me directly and I will be happy to discuss next steps with you.
This is a private and confidential group. Under no circumstances is any personal information or identity to be shared outside of the group.
Partner Recovery Group
A safe, supportive space for partners healing after betrayal
This Partners’ Recovery Group offers a safe, respectful, and supportive therapeutic space for individuals impacted by discovery, betrayal, and the trauma of being in relationship with a partner who has engaged in sexual compulsivity or addiction. The group focuses on emotional stabilization, nervous system regulation, boundary clarification, and the restoration of self-agency and self-trust after relational rupture. Through facilitated discussion, structured check-ins, mindfulness-based practices, and experiential support, participants are guided in processing the impact of betrayal, managing triggers, clarifying needs, and reconnecting with a more authentic sense of self. The group provides ongoing support, shared resources, and a steady container where healing, clarity, and grounded decision-making can emerge over time—whether the relationship continues or not.
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Group Overview
This partners’ recovery group provides a safe, respectful, and supportive therapeutic environment for individuals impacted by discovery, betrayal, and the experience of being in relationship with a partner who may be in denial, early recovery, or ongoing recovery from a discovered double life involving sexual compulsivity or addiction.
The group focuses on helping participants process the impact of betrayal and attachment trauma; address relational ruptures; clarify personal and relational boundaries and needs; develop regulation and coping skills for triggering events; support emotional stabilization and individuation; strengthen self-agency; and reconnect with a more authentic sense of self.
Trauma is not primarily a cognitive problem, but a neurobiological one. Traumatic experiences are held in deeper areas of the brain that govern survival, attachment, and regulation, often outside of language and conscious memory. Because these systems respond to safety rather than explanation, healing requires working with the body and nervous system, not only insight or story.
The group draws from several trauma-informed and relational approaches, with an emphasis on practical and experiential application. These include Attachment Theory, to understand how early relational wounds shape emotional responses and patterns of connection; Internal Family Systems (IFS), to identify and work with protective and wounded parts that arise in response to threat, loss, and betrayal; and Brainspotting, to support trauma processing, nervous system regulation, and embodied healing.
Jungian-oriented perspectives help illuminate the deeper meaning of the recovery journey, including exploration of identity, self-worth, and movement toward greater wholeness and personal agency. Together, these approaches support emotional regulation, grounding in self-worth, and the development of clearer, healthier relational boundaries that make intimacy safer and more possible.
Group sessions include mindfulness-based practices, Brainspotting sessions when appropriate, structured check-ins focused on current challenges and progress, selected readings, and facilitated discussions on partner-recovery topics. Participants are encouraged to engage respectfully in dialogue, offer thoughtful and constructive feedback, and develop a sense of recovery support both within the group and, when appropriate, outside of scheduled meetings.
Group members will receive readings and shared resources between sessions to support continued learning and integration.
Schedule
The Partner Group meets monthly for two and a half hours on the last Friday of each month. This is a structured program that includes facilitated group meetings, along with guided work outside of group sessions. Members engage in a structured recovery process supported by readings, resources, and reflective exercises.

