Group dynamics form a basis for group therapy, often with therapeutic approaches that are formed of groups such as family therapy and the expressive therapy.
Some common types of expressive therapy include:
The film demonstrates how expressive therapies bypass limitations.
Writing therapy is a form of expressive therapy that uses the act of writing and processing the written word as therapy.
A large part of the program centers on "expressive therapies", including art therapy, healing sound therapy, meditation, psychodrama, breath work, and yoga.
Journal therapy is a type of expressive therapy used to help the writer better understand life issues so that they can cope with them or fix them.
As a form of expressive therapy, DMT assumes that movement and emotion are directly related.
While creativity and artistic expression are important parts of expressive therapy, they are secondary to the goal of achieving a therapeutic benefit.
But then there are those folks with mouths as stern as minus signs, their faces like fists; they could use a little expressive therapy, for sure.
Bibliotherapy is an expressive therapy that uses an individual's relationship to the content of books and poetry and other written words as therapy.