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Open to anyone offering social inclusion or emotional support

Welcome to Peer Inclusion Space

A safe place to support each other and make friends, with inclusion for all.

You’re in the right place if you’ve ever felt like no one understands. Or if you just need someone to listen. Peer Inclusion Space is a community of peer supporters, friends, family, and people with lived experience. No qualifications needed. No paywalls. No gatekeeping. Just people who believe everyone deserves connection.

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How It Works

Three simple ways to connect

1

Join a Room

Drop into AA, Al-Anon, or peer support rooms. Cameras off is fine. Talk when you want, listen when you need.

2

Start Your Own Room

Got a group to support? Open a secure room in minutes and invite the people you want to be there.

3

Everyone’s Included

Built-in AI captions, sign-language avatars, and lip reading mean no one gets left out.

Why It Matters

The power of peer support

Research consistently shows that peer support reduces isolation, builds resilience, and improves wellbeing. When people connect with others who truly understand, healing happens.

Someone Who Listens

Talking to someone with lived experience creates a unique bond. They don’t judge—they understand, because they’ve been there too.

You’re Not Alone

Isolation makes every struggle harder. Peer support reminds you that others face similar challenges and have found ways through.

Shared Strength

Seeing others cope, recover, and thrive offers hope and practical strategies you might not find in traditional services.

A Two-Way Street

Helping others strengthens your own recovery. Peer support empowers everyone involved—givers and receivers alike.

Anonymous Peer Support

Join a confidential video meeting with no recording, no notes, and no personal information required. Share with others who understand, or simply listen.

Why peer support groups matter

Based on research and NHS guidance, here is what makes peer support groups powerful.

1. Reduces isolation, builds belonging

People dealing with the same challenge often feel alone and stigmatised. Peer groups give a sense of shared understanding and mutual respect — members feel less isolated because there are other people experiencing the same or very similar to you. That belonging provides hope, which is vital when people feel hopeless.

2. Everyone understands — no explaining needed

Peer support is built on mutual acceptance and understanding from shared lived experience. It creates a safe space where you do not have to explain or defend your experience — an acceptance that professionals cannot always give.

3. Increases hope, confidence and self-efficacy

Groups give people both belonging and empowerment through exchanging lived experiences. Seeing others contending with the same adversity and making progress is inspiring and encouraging.

4. Practical and emotional support

Members get emotional support, practical advice, and learn how others cope day-to-day. Reviews find peer support aids recovery, reduces depression, and improves self-belief; for addiction it is linked to higher abstinence and better treatment engagement.

5. Mutual benefit — helpers heal too

It is a two-way process. People gain value not only from sharing their own story but from helping others. Both peer workers and members report improved wellbeing and a renewed sense of purpose.

6. Accessible and less clinical

Peer support is non-hierarchical and low-cost to run. Shorter or no waiting times, and a focus on wellbeing and lived experience rather than clinical interventions, reduce self-stigma.

Peer support works because people who have been there can offer acceptance, understanding, and practical hope. No one should have to face it alone.

Need urgent help?

Peer support is not a crisis service. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, contact emergency services or one of these free helplines.

Samaritans

24/7

Anyone in emotional distress. Free, confidential.

Shout

24/7

Free 24/7 text support for anyone in crisis.

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Getting Started

How to join a peer support session

No account needed. No personal details required. You can be in a safe, supportive room within minutes.

1

Click to Start

Hit the ‘Start Peer Support Session’ button. No sign-up forms, no downloads, no waiting list.

2

Choose a Name

Enter any name you like—your first name, a nickname, or just ‘Guest’. You stay completely anonymous.

3

Camera Optional

Your camera and microphone are off by default. Turn them on only if and when you feel ready.

4

Share or Listen

There is no pressure to speak. Many people find comfort simply by listening to others who understand.

5

Leave Anytime

You are in control. Stay for five minutes or fifty. Leave whenever you need to—no explanations required.

Our Promise

We believe connection is a right, not a privilege. That’s why we give peer supporters, loved ones, community leaders, and lived-experience volunteers accessible rooms to give and receive emotional support. No credentials required. No one gets left out, and no one has to feel alone.

Your Privacy Comes First

Anonymity is the foundation of everything we do.

  • Use first names or a username — your choice
  • What’s said here, stays here
  • No screenshots, no recordings, no sharing outside this space
  • Cameras are always optional

Because when you feel safe, you can speak freely.

Ready to Connect?

You don’t have to face it alone. There’s a room waiting for you.

Peer Inclusion Space is not a crisis service.

If you need urgent help, please contact 111, 999, or Samaritans at 116 123.

Call Samaritans