Panorama Therapy | Miranda Nadeau Ph.D., Psychologist

How to Be an Anti Racist Therapist: 5 Impactful Action Steps

How to Be an Anti Racist Therapist: 5 Impactful Action Steps

Becoming an anti-racist therapist means going beyond cultural humility training to active, sustained engagement with anti-racist education, community accountability, and the use of your clinical skills in service of racial justice. The five action steps below cover live training, recorded webinars, book clubs, documentary discussions, and direct skill deployment.

Why does anti-racist therapy matter?

Racial justice and inclusivity for Black communities belong on every therapist’s mind and in every therapist’s practice. As a Licensed Psychologist, I’ve been looking for ways to ensure that talk about anti-racism and social justice is backed up by serious, committed action. This applies especially to therapists and other mental health professionals. Because of the power granted to us in the counseling relationship, we have a weighty responsibility to inform ourselves, commit to anti-racism, and participate in dismantling white supremacy and the structures that maintain racial inequality.

The resources below come from activist educators, counselors, and community leaders. My hope is that with some inspiration, other therapists, mental health professionals, social workers, and counseling practices can grow in their racial awareness and become better equipped to serve the full range of human experience. While anti-racism in therapy has many dimensions, anti-Blackness underlies racism in all its forms, and that’s where the work often has to start.

Action Step 1: Engage in a live training

Several therapist and educator activists offer live facilitated trainings and workshops for teams, at costs manageable for a small or mid-sized practice. All too often, colleagues of color are asked to bear the burden of educating their privileged, White counterparts. Don’t let this happen in your practice.

Action Step 2: Engage with a recorded training or webinar

If you can’t make a live training work, educate yourself and your colleagues through recorded formats that combine anti-racist teaching with exercises and discussion.

Some single-instance webinars worth watching and rewatching:

Action Step 3: Engage in conversation over a book club

Gather your organization, therapist friends, or chosen family to deep-dive into a book that encourages awareness and action around racial justice. Hire a facilitator who can structure the discussion around shared exploration and calling in. A person of color on your team can’t do this job for you.

Action Step 4: Watch a documentary and be anti-racist together

Sit down for a dedicated viewing and facilitated discussion on a documentary or film that illuminates the history of racial injustice or celebrates activism. Don’t just get angry; have an extended conversation with your team, led by an anti-racist activist you compensate for their time.

A movie poster for When They See Us, relevant to the topic of how to be an anti racist therapist

Action Step 5: Deploy your clinical skills directly

As trained mental health professionals, we hold a skillset that can be put to work in support of Black, Indigenous, and people of color and to dismantle the systems that have historically pushed them out of care. Unfortunately, non-Black therapists have historically perpetuated racism and prejudiced practices, including through racial microaggressions against African American clients. Black, Indigenous, and people of color continue to encounter serious obstacles in accessing mental health care. This is where you come in. Engaging your therapist skills and anti-racist aims, you can:

  • Offer to lead a mindfulness workshop for communities of color;
  • Teach activists about self-care and self-compassion through a free course;
  • Join insurance panels or offer more low sliding scale spots;
  • Educate your white peers on the White Racial Identity Model, a continuum of development that may lead to anti-racist action; and
  • Especially if you’re a training site for pre-grads, interns, or post-grads, make sure your workplace is racially inclusive, anti-racist, and doing the work BIPOC therapists need to feel welcome and engaged. When only 4% of psychologists are Black, it is essential to ensure that your colleagues and therapists-in-training are representative of the populations you (rightly) want to access as an anti-racist therapist.

Anti-racist therapists — and other helpers too: what action steps are you committing to for your own growth, for your clients, for your practice, and for the communities you serve? What resources did I leave out here? Share in the comments below.

At Panorama Therapy, anti-racist and culturally responsive practice is foundational, not supplemental. If you’re a client looking for a therapist who has done this work and continues to do it, reach out to learn more about working with us.

Image credit: a katz, Shutterstock.com / Netflix

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