The New Normal Charity
Group Therapist: bereavement volunteers - Volunteer

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Group Therapist: bereavement volunteers - Volunteer
Volunteer therapist needed to facilitate a monthly online reflective group for bereavement support volunteers. Person-centred/integrative background ideal. Free safeguarding & SFA training offered. Meaningful, low-commitment role with a warm, dedicated team.
What difference will you make?
Your support of our volunteers will help their wellbeing, confidence and connection to their fellow volunteers. By having that space for themselves, they will feel more supported in their own facilitation roles, strengthening the resilience of our volunteer community, which in turn will greatly impact the sustainability of everything The New Normal offers.
What are we looking for?
You will ideally be a qualified or accredited therapist with a person-centred or integrative background, and an affinity for bereavement, grief or community-based work. Experience of facilitating groups is desirable, though not essential; what matters most is that you are warm, grounded and confident holding a space where people can be honest about how they are feeling. An understanding of vicarious trauma and the emotional demands of volunteer work would be a real asset, as would a willingness to work collaboratively with a non-clinical team. You must be registered with a relevant professional body such as BACP or UKCP, and be willing to check the scope of this role with your insurer before committing.
Reasons to use Rodeo
I’m in my final year doing Economics and I don’t know whether to apply for grad schemes now or do a masters first. What do you think?
Honest answer — it depends on where you want to end up. A lot of top grad schemes (Big 4, civil service, banking) don’t need a masters. Let’s look at the ones you’d be competitive for now, and we can decide if a masters actually adds anything.
Also worth knowing: most autumn 2026 applications are open now. Timing matters more than you think.
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Graduate Consultant — 2026 Scheme
Why you're a good match
StrongYour economics background and your summer at a regional bank line up with what PwC looks for on the consulting scheme. Applications close in four weeks.
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Every day your agent scans the market matching roles against what actually matters to you, not just keywords on a CV.
Why you're a good match
You’ve got the grades and the economics background, and your bank internship is exactly the experience this scheme looks for. Apply soon — deadlines close within the month.
Experience fit
Your summer at the bank plus your econometrics coursework map directly to the day-one responsibilities on this scheme — client modelling, market briefings, and deal support.
Only hits
No noise. No "maybe this fits." Just roles with a clear explanation of why they're right — and where to focus when applying.
Remote
What will you be doing?
We are looking for a warm, grounded therapist to facilitate a monthly online support group for the volunteers who make The New Normal possible.
The New Normal runs free peer support groups for people navigating bereavement across the UK. Our volunteers commit their time and energy to hold space for some of the most painful human experiences; we are looking for support to hold space for them too.


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We are looking for a qualified therapist, ideally with a person-centred or integrative background, to facilitate a 75 minute online group session each month a safe, reflective space where our volunteers can decompress, process what has come up in their peer support work, and feel supported. This is a facilitation role rather than a clinical one, so you won't be carrying clinical responsibility for individuals, but you will need the skill and confidence to hold a group with confidence, and the ability to offer gentle reflective feedback when it's needed.
If you have an affinity with bereavement, community-based work, or supporting those who support others, this could be a deeply rewarding way to contribute your skills.
“It took my CV and asked me questions relevant to understanding what kind of jobs to suggest for me. Suggestions were almost perfect. Jobs were exactly what I’ve been looking for.”
Jessica, London
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