Personal Support Groups
For people directly affected by hoarding disorder, chronic disorganization, or clutter overwhelm who want understanding, encouragement, and practical next steps.
Support groups
Peer-led groups and workshops give people a place to be honest about clutter, fear, grief, avoidance, family pressure, and the hard work of starting again.
Why groups help
People affected by hoarding disorder may spend years feeling judged, embarrassed, or misunderstood. Family members can feel alone too.
A supportive group can reduce shame and help people see that progress does not have to begin with a dramatic cleanout. It can begin with honesty, encouragement, structure, and one manageable next step.
The Peer Tree's approach is peer-led and nonclinical. Groups are built around dignity, shared learning, practical tools, and steady momentum.
Group pathways
For people directly affected by hoarding disorder, chronic disorganization, or clutter overwhelm who want understanding, encouragement, and practical next steps.
For supporters who need language, boundaries, safety guidance, and a place to talk honestly without being told to just force a cleanout.
Shorter sessions can focus on sorting, acquiring, motivation, communication, safety priorities, paperwork, or maintaining progress after cleanup.
The Peer Tree owns Unburied, a digital peer-support pathway that can help people stay connected between groups and sessions.
What groups are not
Groups are peer-led support and education. They do not replace clinical treatment, diagnosis, or emergency care.
No one should have to perform their pain or prove they deserve help. The tone is honest, respectful, and practical.
The purpose is not to pressure people into sudden discarding. The purpose is to build trust, insight, readiness, and action.
Good fit
You may be tired of hiding, explaining, avoiding, or feeling like nobody understands why this is so hard.
A group can help you keep returning to small, realistic steps without making the whole home the first goal.
You may need a calmer way to talk about safety, boundaries, and what helping can realistically look like.
Support does not end after one cleanup or one good weekend. Groups and Unburied can help maintain connection.
Common questions
Virtual options may be offered as availability grows. Unburied also provides a digital peer-support pathway connected to The Peer Tree.
No. Support does not require public exposure or shame. Any sharing should be voluntary and respectful of privacy.
Yes, when the group or workshop is intended for supporters. Friends and family often need separate guidance from people directly affected.
Yes. Ongoing support can help protect momentum, reduce isolation, and make maintenance feel less like starting from zero again.
Interest list
Reach out and tell us whether you are looking for personal support, support as a friend or family member, or an online pathway.