Richfield Group Therapy for Adults

Adult Group Therapy

Nystrom & Associates Richfield Group Therapy for Adults offers group therapy for those struggling with a variety of issues including anger management, grief & loss, depression, anxiety, substance use disorders, and more.

Richfield Group Therapy for Adults provides you with a peer support system that allows you the opportunity to share and discuss issues with those going through similar situations themselves, all the while being directed and led by a highly qualified mental health professional. Group therapy can be a rewarding experience that enhances communication skills and allows you to learn proven strategies to manage specific problems.

Group Therapy for Adults Can Help With:

Group therapy provides many benefits including camaraderie, accountability, self-discovery, and the opportunity to gain different perspectives. It can help you with trauma, chronic pain, weight loss, and many other personal life challenges. Sharing feelings, experiences, and pain with a group can help release anger and pent-up emotions. Group therapy is a great environment to develop positive support systems and explore whatever emotional or behavioral problems you might be facing. Group therapy can be done on its own or in addition to individual or couple’s therapy.

Schedule An Appointment Today!

If you or someone you love is suffering from psychiatric disorders, there is hope. Life with a mental disorder does not have to be a daily struggle. Discover the world of difference treatment can make for you as well as your loved ones.

Call Nystrom & Associates today at 320-460-8028 or click the button below to get started.

All Group Therapy for Adults Locations

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About Richfield, MN

Richfield is a city in Hennepin County, Minnesota, United States. Best Buy, the U.S.'s largest electronics retailer, has its headquarters in Richfield. The population was 36,994 at the 2020 census. In the 1820s, some small settlements developed around Fort Snelling. By the late 1830s, the fortress served as a destination for newcomers—lumbermen, missionaries, farmers, traders and travelers—migrating to the borderlands people were now calling "Minisota." Minnesotan Franklin Steele first reached the area in 1837 where he worked as a sutler, selling goods to soldiers.