Bringing Love & Relationality Back into Therapy

What does it mean to resist perpetuating colonial harms, and integrate liberatory practices by centering collective care, liberatory imagination, and anti-oppressive ethics?

Access 5 days of resistance-led insights for therapeutic practice, soul-nourishing conversations, & resources for practical integration.

Check out your 5-day line up

We’re not kidding when we say soul-nourishing...

Bhupie Dulay & Abby Chow | Connective Intentions: Roots of Shared Liberatory Practice

Kick off the summit with us as we explore the intentions and roots of shared liberatory practice, influential thinkers and dreamers that shaped our development, and the most impactful lessons we’ve learned to date.

Rachel Ricketts | All About Love…As Activism

Addressing bell hooks' definition of love as the foundation for radical change, community care, accountability and transformative justice in our individual and collective lives.

Jennifer-Lee Koble | Decolonize? We are not there yet...

An invitation to connection and practice, rather than tips and tricks. How do we lean into relationship, wisdom, and fullness; embrace the unknown, resist fixing and knowing and instead BE.

Gabes Torres | Revolutionary Healing in the Global South

This talk will explore the tendency to centralize the West's methodologies of healing, and what to do with this tendency. We will then look at how healing spaces in the global South have looked like, with more attention to the colonized islands of the Philippines. What can we learn from the islands about healing, without taking a consumerist, 'gaze-y' approach? How can we learn about the intersection of healing and justice practices from teachers who live in the most stifled and oppressed parts of the world? How can communities and practitioners in the West integrate these models of care in their own practices and spaces?

Ji-Youn Kim | Intro to Disability Justice & Mad Liberation in Therapeutic Practice

What is wellness and mental health without addressing disability & madness? Ableism and sanism are too often dismissed in anti-oppressive discourse without the recognition of how abled supremacy is at the core of so many systems of oppression. Given how the mental health industry is built upon categories of normal and deviant, healthy and unhealthy, this conversation offers an introduction to understanding and analyzing mental health and therapeutic practice through Disability Justice and Mad Liberation.

Xu Wang | Ambiguous Soup: Queering Therapy and Care

In this conversation, you are invited to expand on what we call therapy and relational work through query. With an exploration on how to bring queer therapy to life in our practice, we explore what care is in relation to therapy and how we invite that into our practice.

Travis Heath | Contemporary Narrative Therapy: Resisting Neoliberalism and Late Capitalism in the Modern World

Individualist ways of relating to the world are so present in our current realities that they often are taken for granted as the only ways of being. Ideas of personal responsibility and the self as a brand or a commodity to be bought and sold can have profound effects on peoples’ lives. This is especially true with the proliferation of social media and other forms of digital branding. Dominant approaches to therapy often unwittingly reinforce neoliberal ideals and story them as mentally healthy (and thus anything that deviates as unhealthy or pathological). In an effort to demonstrate these ideas in practice, this video will highlight work with a couple that attempts to tend to the effects of neoliberalism and late capitalism on the life of their relationship.

Ashley Lagrange | The Personal is Political: Self Disclosure as a Tool for Radical Transparency

This conversation will explore the value of lived experienced providers and the ability to use self disclosure as a means of trust and connection building. Self disclosure will be expanded on as a means of honoring radical transparency and exemplifying to folks the layers of politicization within our identities.

Bhupie Dulay & Abby Chow | Reflexive Directions Beyond the Talks

Unlearning is generative. Join us as we unpack each conversation further with common themes, sparks of insights, and practical transformations. Get ideas for what’s next in our shared work and how we can dream it into reality.

And beyond:

We will be releasing a bonus video with Vikki Reynolds in the coming months further informing the lineages of resistance we’re connected to in our work. Stay tuned for updates!

Vikki Reynolds | Activist Orientations and Histories of Liberatory Practice and Revolutionary Love (Nov 2024)

In this dialogue Vikki will engage with Bhupie and Abby around the influences and mentors whose shoulders her work stands on, across time, in relation to Liberatory Practice and enacting Therapeutic Love.

We will circle around Popular Education movement and teachings of Revolutionary Love which Paulo Freire describes as solidarity with others and commitment to their cause. We will touch on the history of Ignacio Martín-Baró being executed by an American backed Salvadoran Death Squad in the 1980’s, and why he was so dangerous to oppressive rulers was his call for Liberation, in all sectors of life including our work. Martín-Baró said, “In order to have a Liberatory Psychology, Psychology must first be liberated” and taught that resistance to political violence and torture is never individual, but always social and an act of communal love. And we will also touch on how The Mothers of the Disappeared of Argentina inspired and educated Vikki's practice in framing love as a liberatory communal practice of solidarity, courage and dignity.

These threads have interwoven love, dignity, and liberatory practice as community projects and profoundly influenced Vikki's frame of justice-doing in community work.

The Speakers You're Unlearning With:

Rachel Ricketts

All about love…as activism

Rachel Ricketts (she/they) is a queer, disabled and multiracial Black woman. She is a spiritual abolitionist, alchemist & award-nominated author of the international instant bestseller DO BETTER: Spiritual Activism for Fighting and Healing from White Supremacy, and the mindfulness picture book – and Read with Jenna pickALL I NEED TO BE – for kids and inner kids alike. 

As an intersectional social justice leader, collective mirror and healer she supports individuals and organizations learning to lead with love and center Black and Indigenous femmes to support collective change, healing and liberation. 

She has helped numerous global brands and organizations including Google, WeWork and Buzzfeed and was named one of well+good’s 2020 Changemakers.

Rachel & her work have been featured on Good Morning America, Today, the New York Times, Essence, The Root, People, Forbes, The Atlantic, Elle, Glamour UK & more.

She loves donuts, dancing, divinity & disruption (ideally all at once). 

Learn more at www.rachelricketts.com and @iamrachelricketts

Jennifer-Lee Koble

Decolonize? We are not there yet…

Jennifer-Lee Koble (she/her) is Métis/Cree on her mom’s line and German on her dad’s. She was born on traditional lands of the Cree, Saulteaux, Dene, Dakota, Lakota, Nakota, and Métis peoples. She is mother to three amazing adults, an Auntie, daughter, sister, niece, cousin, partner, and friend. These relationships anchor her – providing daily responsibilities, learnings and joy. 

Jennifer-Lee is currently living, working and raising her family on the stolen traditional, ancestral homelands of the Musqueam, Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh peoples. She earned a BSW and MSW from UBC School of Social Work and has a clinical practice supporting Indigenous community members in the healing from the historic and ongoing impacts of colonization. Jennifer-Lee provides clinical consultation; 1:1 and small group, to white and IBPoC therapists wanting to expand their practice lens beyond the colonial education they have received and develop greater accountability and an embodied connection to living on stolen lands. Jennifer-Lee has been invited to facilitate her Anti-Indigenous Racism workshops in the health, education, social services and private sectors for many years. Since 2020 Jennifer-Lee has been learning from and facilitating Somatic Abolitionism workshops with Resmaa Menakem.

Jennifer-Lee’s has been guided by teachings from many Elders, knowledge keepers and truth speakers thru her life. Her strong, heart-centred voice comes from the deep connections she experiences with her Métis kin and Ancestors.

Gabes Torres

Revolutionary Healing in the Global South

Gabes Torres (she/siya) is a mental health practitioner, grassroots organizer, and writer based in the global South. Her clinical practice and research focus on collective and intergenerational trauma, and the psychological implications and stress from imperialism, racism, climate catastrophes, and human rights violations. Gabes writes stories on mental health and international solidarity at Yes! Magazine. Her passion is to elevate communities and models of collective flourishing within and beyond the West.

Instagram, Threads, and Twitter: @gabestorres

Ji-Youn Kim

Intro to Disability Justice & Mad Liberation in Therapeutic Practice

Ji-Youn (they/she) is a queer, relatively non-disabled Corean femme, immigrant and settler, joy-seeker, liberatory dreamer, psych survivor, justice-oriented therapist-ish and ongoing creation of community. Born in Bucheon, Korea, they grew up and continue to live on the unceded territories of Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Nations in what is colonially known as Vancouver, Canada, which shapes their relationships with land, kinship, sovereignty and co-resistance. Ji-Youn works in private/alternative practice in relationships with predominantly Sick & Disabled QTBIPOC client community members with the orientation of therapy-sh as a space to practice embodied liberatory practices in the spirit of collective liberation.

In recent years, she has also been teaching about abolitionist mental health care, the mental health industrial complex and the blurring of the categorization of therapy. Their practices are informed by Black & Indigenous feminist scholars, Disability Justice & Transformative Justice educators, abolitionists and organizers, as well as their lived experiences of mental illness/Madness and psychiatric incarceration.

itsjiyounkim.com | instagram.com/itsjiyounkim

Xu Wang

Ambiguous Soup: Queering Therapy and Care

Xu (They/Them) is a non-binary, queer, 1.5 generation Chinese-Canadian immigrant settler, residing on the unceded traditional territories of hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh peoples (known colonially as Burnaby). Additionally, Xu identifies as neurodivergent and mentally ill, while acknowledging privileges of middle-class and able-bodied status. Beyond their role as a counsellor and art therapist, they are also a parent to a kindergartener, navigating the chaotic yet magical experience of parenthood. As an avid artist, they find joy in diverse creative pursuits, such as caring for plants and animals, painting, collaging, cooking, and immersing myself in the captivating worlds of video games. Born in Kunming, China, raised by their grandmother for most of their early childhood, they began to immerse themself in art making. Their grandmother was a painter, and the first person to model for them resilience and healing.

Travis Heath

Contemporary Narrative Therapy: Resisting Neoliberalism and Late Capitalism in the Modern World

Travis is a licensed psychologist and is an Associate Professor at San Diego State University where he serves as Chair of the Department of Counseling & School Psychology. Past work he’s been involved with looked at shifting from a multicultural approach to counseling to one of cultural democracy that invites people to heal in mediums that are culturally near. His most recent work involves incorporating the work of Black abolitionist scholars into psychotherapy, community healing, and uprising.

His writing has focused on the use of rap music in narrative therapy, working with persons entangled in the criminal injustice system in ways that maintain their dignity, narrative practice stories as pedagogy, a co-created questioning practice called reunion questions, and community healing strategies. He is co-author, with David Epston and Tom Carlson, of the first book on Contemporary Narrative Therapy released in June 2022 entitled, “Reimagining Narrative Therapy Through Practice Stories and Autoethnography.” The book is part of the “Writing Lives” series with Routledge publishing. He also completed a video series of his clinical work in June of 2024 for Psychotherapy.net entitled, “Reimagining Multiculturalism: A Contemporary Narrative Approach.” Travis has been fortunate to facilitate workshops and speak in Australia, Canada, Denmark, Hong Kong, India, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, United Kingdom, and United States.

Ashley Lagrange

The Personal is Political: Self Disclosure as a Tool for Radical Transparency

Ashley M. Lagrange (They/Them) is a Queer, Neurodivergent, Non-binary, Fat, Black, Dominican-American Femme therapist with a passion for helping folks develop and navigate Liberatory practices. They have worked with adults and teens who seek a space to explore their identities and impact on the world at large. Ashley is passionate about the collective Liberation of all LGBTQIA+ identifying folks through the power of radical vulnerability, self-reflection, and community connection. They seek to guide folks through their emotional processing through a collective lens that honors individual experience.

https://www.ashleymlagrange.com

https://www.instagram.com/thecollagetherapist/

Vikki Reynolds

Activist Orientations and Histories of Liberatory Practice and Revolutionary Love

Vikki Reynolds (PhD RCC) is an activist/ therapist and community organizer who works to bridge the worlds of social justice activism with community work and therapy. Vikki is a white settler on the territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh and Musqueam nations. Vikki’s people are Irish and English folks, and she is a heterosexual woman with cisgender privilege. Her experience includes supervision and therapy with People with Lived/Living Experience and other workers responding to the drug poisoning catastrophe, refugees and survivors of torture – including Indigenous people who have survived residential schools and other state violence, sexualized violence counsellors, mental health and substance misuse counsellors, housing and shelter workers, activists and working alongside gender and sexually diverse communities. Vikki is an Adjunct Professor and has written and presented internationally. Articles & speaks free at: www.vikkireynolds.ca

Here's what to expect

Insights for therapeutic Practice

5 days of soul-nourishing conversations and resistance-led insights for therapeutic practice

Dive deep into the world of liberatory practice with key thinkers and liberatory dreamers in the therapeutic space. These soul-nourishing conversations will give you resistance-led insights for therapeutic practice, guiding you in building contextual awareness, and implementing liberatory practice in your work, beyond DEI.

Foundational Resources Unveiled

We’re sharing the foundational touchstones that have radically shaped our practice. Cut through the overwhelm of leaning into this work by mapping your own journey of resistance and liberatory practice to collective wisdom. You and your practice are one in the same, get support in redefining your relationship to social justice.

Unlimited Access

Access unlimited viewing of all conversations and presentations whenever and wherever you want through 2024. Revisit this workas you unpack what it means to engage in liberatory practice, at your own pace.

Connect with Community

Start conversations and build relationships with practitioners who share your collective ethics through our dedicated Justice in Action discord channel. Because liberatory practice is collective practice. You are not alone in this work.

Accessibility Supported

All conversations and presentations come with transcripts and image descriptions, and are created with body-centered capacity in mind. Engage with us on your way to work, going for a walk, or doing chores around the house.

For therapists, by therapists.

Learn from communities of resistance to address systemic oppression in therapeutic practice, build contextual consciousness, and realign with collective ethics.

This summit has been created by therapists for therapists. Connect with what it means to radicalize our practice with love & relationality, resist perpetuating colonial harms, and integrate liberatory practices into our work by centering collective care, liberatory imagination, and anti-oppressive practices in therapy.

With the All-Access Pass, you’ll get unlimited access through 2024, to all of the conversations and presentations from the Leaning into Liberatory Practice Summit.

Once you enroll, you’ll get an email with login instructions. Set up your password and you’re in! If you’re logging in with us in real time, the video module will drip each day. Make sure you engage with our discord community as you go through the material!

Meet your facilitators

abby chow is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Abby Chow, (She/Her)

I found my way to this work through exploring and navigating my own relational harms through the lens of privilege and systemic oppression. Aside from my counselling practice and various front line roles, my work primarily involves providing clinical supervision and business consulting to justice-oriented practitioners and agencies, as well as teaching at various local graduate programs and being a board member for Healing in Colour.

bhupie dulay rcc acs, clinical supervisor for bipoc counselling

Bhupie Dulay (She/Her)

Bhupie is honoured to work alongside people who are navigating and resisting multiple systems of oppression individually, within relationships, and in communities. Clinical supervision is an enriching experience for Bhupie—a space where she can engage in a collaborative dialogue about best practices and ethics alongside the critique and feedback

Your Unlearning gives back

Aside from compensating speakers for their work, proceeds from the Leaning into Liberatory Practice summit will also go towards supporting lower cost counselling for SDQTBIPOC+ folx at Prospect Counselling and local mutual aid efforts in so-called BC.

Thanks to your support, the Leaning into Liberatory Practice Summit: Bringing Love & Relationality Back into Therapy is sold out!

To be in the know for our 2026 Leaning into Liberatory Practice Summit, email us at connect@prospectcounselling.ca and we’ll add you to the list!

Deep dive into practice

abby chow is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Abby Chow (she/her) is a cisqueer, working-turned-middle class, half-gen, currently non-disabled, straight-sized settler on the stolen, ancestral territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), S’ólh Téméxw (Stó:lō), Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh), Qayqayt, and kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem) peoples. She is from Hong Kong and lives with chronic pain and ADHD. 

For the last decade, she’s had the privilege of working with folx resisting multiple systems of oppression, which often manifests as being impacted by the criminal punishment system, addictions, and relational trauma. Her work now primarily revolves around providing clinical supervision and business consulting services from a justice-grounded perspective.

Above all else she loves being an explorer of wonder and possibilities, witnessing and co-creating with the magic that still manages to survive this dumpster fire world, and aspiring to be a human database and connective force for our revolutionary resistance. Her ancestors come from roots in Chaozhou and Nanjing, and a lineage of creating sneaky practices to survive necropolitics, poverty, and refugeeism. 

bhupie dulay rcc acs, clinical supervisor for bipoc counselling

Bhupie Dulay (she/her) is a settler who was born and raised on the stolen unceded, ancestral territories of the Semiahmoo, sq̓əc̓iy̓aɁɬ təməxʷ (Katzie), Kwantlen, kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem), Qayqayt, and sc̓əwaθenaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsawwassen) Nations; and her ancestors are from India. Bhupie is a cis, non-disabled, middle class, small fat woman.

Currently, Bhupie works as a therapist, supervisor, professor, and consultant. Her work is informed by social justice and collaborative principles. She is honoured to work alongside people who are navigating and resisting multiple systems of oppression individually, within relationships, and in communities. As a clinical supervisor, Bhupie supports teams providing health care services and counselling services, practicing counsellors and student counsellors. Supervision is an enriching experience for Bhupie—a space where she can engage in a collaborative dialogue about best practices and ethics alongside the critique and feedback.

Bhupie also provides workshops, trainings, and consultations to organisations, teams, and boards. She is an adjunct faculty at Adler University and City University, and an instructor at Vancouver Community College. And she is a board member at Healing in Colour.

Linda Lin MA RCC reflecting on justice

I’m a cis-gendered, able-bodied, hetero-ish racialized settler, born and raised in so-called Vancouver. I’m a child of first-generation immigrants from the Nakhi/Naxi ancestry of China and my pronouns are She/Her.

Getting into justice and liberation work has been like an itch that continues to grow. The more I unlearn the harmful narratives and approaches that I once had me chained, the more questions of curiosity and wonder I come up with. Why do things have to be this way? Who has the authority to say this about my identity and my experiences?

I am continuously coming up with creative ways to reclaim power back, to be in reciprocity with other folks, and to intervene, using my voice to advocate for marginalized folks, collaborating and helping them figure out what this work can look like for themselves.

xu wang is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Xu Wang (they/them) is a non-binary, queer, 1.5 generation Chinese-Canadian immigrant settler who live, work, and benefit from taking up space on the unceded traditional territories of hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh peoples (colonially known as Burnaby.). They are also neurodivergent, mentally ill, and a parent to a pre-schooler.

As an art maker, they enjoy all things creative. Some of their favorite interests include caring for plants and animals, painting, collaging, cooking, and immersing themself in the alternate realities of video games. Many of their healing experiences were inspired by meaningful relationships with others and in communities of care. In these supportive spaces, they are able to reclaim parts of themself and nourish their growth by embracing every aspect of their humanity.

They see working as a therapist and being a human being as inseparable processes. More than their educational and training backgrounds, they draw from their lived experiences and inner knowing to support those who share space with me. They have found deep healing in the practice of embracing “enoughness”. 

theresa thomas is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Theresa Thomas (she/her) is an educator, counsellor, mentor, and creator originally from so-called Texas. For 7 years post-graduate Theresa worked on the front lines with local non-profits to provide accessible and quality therapeutics for those with barriers to support. Theresa is committed to helping people achieve freedom from systemic and societal oppression in every capacity, addressing the distresses that come from navigating shame, marginalization, discrimination, disassociation, and self-worth.

Theresa is passionate about developing personal power and helping individuals and relationships live authentically and thrive in their truths. In 2020, she started her own therapeutic practice, In-Power Counselling & Services, which continues the work she’s done in healing and empowerment. Theresa is also a clinical supervisor for new and developing therapists. Theresa’s hope is to make mental health, daily health!

When she’s not working Theresa is a learner in every sense of the word. She loves to read and consume content and information. She is a sister, a friend, a daughter, a cat aunt, a writer, crafter, painter, and creator.

Sacha Medine is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Sacha Médiné’s (he/him) therapeutic practice and activism focuses on supporting individuals and people in relationships who are part of communities subject to structural violence (including but not limited to BIPOCs, Queer, trans & gender nonconforming folks), people involved in social justice movements & direct action activism, and folks working on being accountable for doing harm in ways that are connected to, or involve participation in, systems of structural oppression (eg. gendered violence & white supremacy). He also provides clinical supervision to counsellors and other practitioners and have been a member of the teaching staff at City University since 2017.

He draws on knowledge and perspectives from feminist, queer, and critical race theory as well from social movements and activism. He truly values the wisdom and knowledge from outside the academy that students bring with them to the program and strive to create a space where it can be recognized, acknowledged, and integrated into clinical practice. Ultimately, he believes that teaching in a counselling program involves an ethical obligation to clients. More specifically, a requirement to participate in the creation of a field that not only more fully reflects the faces of its clients, but seeks first to be in care of, and led by, the communities in our society most marginalized and subject to structural violence. He attempts, in whatever ways he can, to always orient my teaching to respond to this requirement.

 

Premala Matthen is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Premala (Lala) Matten (she/her) is queer and cis, a brown woman and a settler, chronically ill/disabled and middle class. Some of her people are Indian and others are white. Her understanding of power, privilege, and oppression is shaped by the range of her positions in the world.


Lala’s experiences of violence and oppression led her to seek change, for herself and others. She is a therapist in independent practice, and the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Healing in Colour, a non-profit that supports BIPOC both to access and to offer healing services. She is also the co-creator of SEEN, a podcast that explores personal healing and collective liberation work through the eyes of Black and brown queer women. Her work sits at the intersection of counselling and activism, firmly rooted in the radical possibilities of QTBIPOC spiritual and emotional healing.

Website

luisa ospina is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Luisa Ospina (she/they) is a non-disabled, queer, white Latinx of mixed ethnic and racial ancestry, now-middle-class, immigrant, settler, woman, offering trauma counselling, facilitation, and consulting services on the stolen, ancestral, and traditional territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. They were born and raised in Medellín, Colombia, and spent a long time living and learning in the ‘United States’ after immigrating.

Luisa values accountability, transparency, and compassion in all aspects of her life. Currently, they work as a Clinical Counsellor, Consultant, and Clinical Supervisor in independent practice. Luisa uses an integration of various trauma-informed, relational, and client-centred approaches that are situated in intersectional feminist, anti-oppressive and social justice principles. They are dedicated to supporting equity-deserving folks with experiences of oppression in their process towards healing and liberation. Luisa actively works towards anti-oppression and anti-racism personally and professionally. Luisa’s analysis and approaches have been heavily influenced by Black and Indigenous feminists, and queer and critical race theories. In the past, they have worked as an educator in post-secondary education and community settings. In addition to their work, Luisa is currently a board member with Healing in Colour. Outside of their work, Luisa enjoys spending time in the sun, dancing, connecting with her community via sharing food, and playing volleyball.

Kim Haxton is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Kim Haxton (Potowatomi) (Kwe wii she) is from the Wasauksing First Nation in Ontario. She has worked across Turtle Island and abroad in various capacities but always with a focus on local leadership.

Her deep understanding of the need for genuine restoration has far-reaching implications as leaders seek vision and all people seek direction to address the mounting pressure of a system incongruous with the values of the natural world. Kim has developed and facilitated programs in land-based education, ceremonies, and leadership for the past 30 years, including as co-founder of Indigeneyez.

She takes her place among thought leaders in the area of decolonization, particularly as it applies to language, art, economics, and gender. She encourages the “lateral liberation” of consciousness by drawing from the embodied knowledge of Indigenous peoples. In multi-day workshops, she moves people through a personal process of questioning what is the truth and what is simply constructed – effectively rupturing what we “know.” True expression of respect, harmony, inclusion, equity can come from this place.

ji-youn kim is a community trainer for anti-oppressive counselling in vancouver

Ji-Youn Kim (they/she) is a queer, currently non-disabled Corean femme, immigrant and settler, joy-seeker, liberatory dreamer, psych survivor, justice-oriented therapist-ish and ongoing creation of community. Born in Bucheon, Corea, they grew up and continue to live on the unceded territories of Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh Nations in what is colonially known as Vancouver, Canada, which shapes their relationships with land, kinship, sovereignty and co-resistance.

Ji-Youn works in private/alternative practice in relationships with predominantly Sick & Disabled QTBIPOC client community members with the orientation of therapy-ish as a space to practice embodied liberatory practices in the spirit of collective liberation. In recent years, she has also been teaching about abolitionist mental health care, the mental health industrial complex and the blurring of the categorization of therapy. Their practices are informed by Black & Indigenous feminist scholars, Disability Justice & Transformative Justice educators, abolitionists and organizers, as well as their lived experienced of mental illness/Madness and psychiatric incarceration.

Email | Website | Instagram