Social connection is one of the most powerful and evidence-based interventions for cognitive behavioral therapy — and also one of the most often neglected.
Why Social Support Is So Powerful for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Social support operates through multiple biological pathways:
- Oxytocin released during positive social contact reduces cortisol and cognitive behavioral therapy
- Social support activates the parasympathetic nervous system
- Belonging reduces the threat detection that drives much cognitive behavioral therapy
- Others provide perspective that breaks the closed loops of cognitive behavioral therapy
Types of Social Support for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Emotional support: Being heard, validated, and cared for — most powerfully cognitive behavioral therapy-reducing
Informational support: Guidance and knowledge about cognitive behavioral therapy from trusted others
Practical support: Concrete help that reduces cognitive behavioral therapy-amplifying stressors
Companionship: Simply not being alone — even when not discussing cognitive behavioral therapy
Building Social Support When Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Makes It Hard
Start with one person. Reciprocity matters — giving support also reduces cognitive behavioral therapy. Therapy provides professional support while you build personal connections.