Let’s co-create the spaces to live the imagination of justice, right here, right now. Ready to join us?

Sound familiar?

While you’re sitting with clients, you just can’t stop thinking how traditional therapy falls short…

It’s just so hard and frustrating to sit, one-on-one with a client experiencing the very real and very destructive impacts of systemic harm.

You keep thinking, “Without a focus on social justice, without advocating for economic reforms and basic human rights, what am I really doing?”

You feel alone and isolated in this process.

You want to be part of a community that just gets it.

Proceeds towards mutual aid

dedicated membership options for every intention

$10

/ Month

Pay it forward

Support our work + mutual aid efforts! 100% of pay it forward memberships go towards wealth redistribution and lower cost counselling in so-called BC.

What's included?

$50

/ month

Connecting

Build Community in Unlearning, Live!

What's included?

$120

/ Month

Practicing

Turn unlearning and community into therapeutic practice.

What's included?

Want to learn more? Keep scrolling!
Need a different price? We’ve got sliding scale options! Contact us at hello@reflectingonjustice.com.

As a therapist, you have committed to pursuing justice and dismantling systems of oppression in your practice, but it feels so isolating.

As the world struggles to keep its mirage of freedom and equity, you’ve been immersing yourself in the unedited reality of systemic injustices and structural abandonment.

You’re uncovering all the content and discourses that have been happening for decades, centuries; some outside the algorithm, some in spaces you know all too well. It’s a lot. And you know you’ve got work to do.

You continue pouring into substacks, following all the activists on the gram, and reading all the books you can get your hands on, trying to create a more justice-oriented life + practice.

And then it hits you, you realize that unlearning your conditioning isn’t just about knowing more, it’s about embodying something different.

That unlearning our conditioning requires reflection, accountability, and collective care; it’s a practice, it’s a way of being, it’s not work we can do alone.

It's not work you want to do alone.

So you try to invite in your colleagues, friends, and family…

But these conversations tend to end with talk, not action. Or worse, in invalidation, frustration, arguments, or all of the above.

Add to that, the level of isolating and combative discourse in the arena and we can pretty much cue the shame triggers of not already knowing more, not having done more, and the despair of stagnancy in the movement.

Rather than moving towards collective liberation, each interaction holds the threat of disappointment and shame that feeds into an inaction and jadedness you’re not willing to give into.

What to expect

Imagine what it would be like if you could…

access rich perspectives on justice-oriented discourse

that’s only possible through community-generated knowledge.

actively live your values

without the distraction of shame; feeling held within the microcosm of the world we’re hoping to create.

have streamlined access to collective action

so you can witness exactly how you’re making a difference.

Build relationships with practitioners

who are grounded in a common ethic. Relationships that foster a believed-in hope for the future we’re envisioning.

Engage in generative, boundaried conversations

without the pressure of having all the answers. Grow through relationship rather than punishment.

Have your learning immediately give back

Each month, 50% of your membership fee goes directly into supporting mutual aid, as well as communities and creators leading justice-work.

We’ve got you covered

The Living Practice membership was created to build community for justice-oriented practitioners, just like you!

Hey, I’m Abby

(she/her) Founder + Writer

I’m a cisqueer, able-bodied, straight-sized, working-turned-middle class, settler from Hong Kong.

When I discovered this work, my life turned upside down. Sure, I experienced my fair share of systemic harms, but I was so entrenched in the colonial, ableist, cis/mono/heteronormative kool-aid that I believed everything I experienced was just my fault. Naturally, I built my life around it like compulsory armor.

But then I was shown something different. After spending a decade unraveling my conditioning to be more vocal about my politics, I connected with a community that made the imagination of a different world possible. I can’t stress enough how much being in community fundamentally transformed me. This hyper-individualistic society isn’t the world we’re trying to create.

I’m not a thought leader, I’m not a visionary, but I can create community. I firmly believe that if enough of us shift, the world will shift with us. We can’t leave each other behind.

So come join us in the lived imagination of collective liberation. ‘Cause you’re not really meant to do this alone. We’re all still learning too.

Hey, I’m Linda

(she/her) Co-Facilitator

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

In my work, people recognize me as a registered clinical counsellor, an art therapist and someone who is into all things creative including envisioning a better world for us all.

I did not come from the world of mental health and justice work growing up, yet my heart has always been there. I am quite a HSP and would feel this surge of empowerment whenever I witness and be part of goodness in the world.

There weren’t words to describe what I had been experiencing, so diving into art making and working with my imagination was the meta-verbal way I worked with to navigate through sticky situations in life.

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.

How it works

When you join the living practice membership, you're connected with:

Monthly Liberation Digests

Every month, on the first Friday of the month we drop a Liberation Digest which includes a new, specially curated, radical piece of community learning.

MONTHLY UNPACKING COMPLICITY PROMPTS

To help you turn the Liberation Digest into transformative action, we include corresponding prompts for unpacking complicity!

MONTHLY Live FIRESIDE CHATS

On the third Friday of every month from 10-11:30am PST, we host dedicated time to hang out + deep dive together on our unlearning/processes over zoom.

Our Practicing members also get an additional group solidarity call
(aka. supervision).

JUSTICE IN ACTION ONLINE COMMUNITY

Engage in our moderated Discord server to further deepen relationships and connection with your fellow justice-oriented practitioners. Hope on a voice chat, start a new thread, share wins, ask questions, and build relationships!

Let’s get real

These difficult conversations need safer spaces. Here’s how we practice Transformative Justice:

As Mia Mingus says, “how do we address harm without creating more harm?”

Part of safety is consistency and transparency. In collaboration with our community, we’ve created guideposts for how we relate to one another so that we can transform punitive conflict into generative conflict and accountability.

These guideposts include agreed upon ways of calling each other in, how mediation circles can be developed, concrete guidelines to ensure that lived experiences are centered and prioritized, and suggested ways of what accountability can look like when harm has occurred.

This was one of the foundational considerations we centered when developing the membership.

Many of us have been in community before where we were harmed unexpectedly. Many of us worry about making a mistake in our unlearning and becoming unwanted in the community.

We can’t ever guarantee that harm won’t happen, so these living guideposts adapt according to our community’s needs. What we can guarantee is, you’ll never alone in holding up accountability.

Community, Learning & Accountability

Is the living practice membership right for you?

You'll love this if...

  • You’ve started diving into this work outside of an academic setting or are familiar with the general ideas.

  • You’re looking for a community to unlearn with.

  • You’re unlearning to disrupt the systems standing in the way of collective liberation.

  • You’re committed to changing the way you may be unconsciously perpetuating systemic harms.

  • You want your unlearning to support communities in direct action, right now.

You might want to pass if...

  • You’ve learned of these topics briefly and are curious to learn more. (Justice Fundaments might be a better fit!)

  • You’re hoping to learn one-on-one from a certified anti-oppression facilitator

  • You’re looking for something more structured and educational (Justice Fundaments might be a better fit!)

  • You’re wanting to emotionally work through previous, specific systemic/interpersonal transgressions.

    (A therapeutic context might be more beneficial for that deep work)

Frequently Asked Questions

Probably the only time we’ll ever say, “we’ve got the answers!”

You’re free to cancel your membership at any time! We’re also happy to refund your first month’s membership if you find that we’re not the right fit during your first month with us.

Yes! We are inviting White folks to join and will continually center marginalized voices when we are in discussion together as a community. After all, we need White co-strugglers in this work and ROJ is here to reflect on opportunities and ideas for White folks to fight for justice.

Mostly, independent community activists or therapists that have published their work to the public! We generally don’t work through academic, non-justice-related literature.

Generally, we split this in thirds. A third goes to the content creator we’re learning from, another third goes to Indigeous organizers to recognize that we are learning as uninvited settlers on their lands, the final third goes to an organizing group or mutual aid request that is voted on and suggested by our members.

We totally get it! Your engagement is voluntary and depends on your comfort level. We have a copyleft philosophy with our sharing, you don’t need to engage to “earn” the content we’re creating. We would love to hear from you though, so hopefully you’ll feel comfortable sharing with us in the future.

Currently our Fireside Chats are on the 3rd Friday of every month at 10am-11:30am PST. We understand everyone’s schedules are difficult to coordinate so this time might not work for everyone. As our community grows we’ll be adding more times/moderators for Fireside chats. In the meantime we have a running poll of other times that would work best for folks.

Fireside chats are not recorded because we want to make sure everyone feels comfortable and safe enough to share their deep dives on difficult topics.

We host our community on Discord, ThriveLearn & Zoom. Each month we drop content by email and through ThriveLearn so you always have copies of our previous deep dives. Our Fireside Chats are hosted on Zoom; the link will be emailed monthly and it's pinned to our Discord channel too! Within Discord you’re able to start private conversations and even voice/video chat with members. Feel like connecting with someone? Just hop into a voice chat!

Justice is a practice that feeds souls.

The great thing is? Experience isn’t a prerequisite.

We just need to let ethics, community, and imagination have more space in our lives. There’s no better time to join a justice-oriented community of therapists.

Co-struggling isn’t an easy commitment. It starts with each one of us unlearning the eugenics-based, us vs. them ideologies of domination that was passed down to us.

It requires interrupting the damaging and unjust ways we relate to one another. It means committing to accountability in a world that would much rather have us pretend to be perfect. It means having to confront the most misaligned parts of ourselves to find our way back to something bigger than us.

You’ll co-create the wisdom and experience of liberation and interdependence. You’ll know you’re never really in it alone. That you are part of the imagination where a different world is possible.

As Mariame Kaba shares, “Everything worthwhile is done with other people.” So come join us. We’d love to welcome you into our community!

 

Together  doesn’t have to wait.

Feedback & Testimonials

Thoughts from your community

Ricky T.

This was hands down my favourite...

This was hands down my favourite course. It was the safest, most honest, brutal-yet-compassionate social justice environment I’ve ever experienced, and was a place for challenging discomfort as growth as well as the emotional support needed for that discomfort.

Sacha M.

I am incredibly inspired by the...

I am incredibly inspired by the programs Bhupie & Abby have built at Prospect. This is the kind of wide ranging justice-oriented learning that I wish I had access to in graduate school, during my time as a student or a professor. I am excited for all those who take part in the programs, for all the clients who will benefit from encountering more competent and just practitioners, and for our field to benefit collectively from the Prospect’s unique offerings and contributions to the practice of justice seeking therapy.

Sophie H.

Not only is the Justice Fundamentals training...

Not only is the Justice Fundamentals training helpful in my work with clients, they have also been healing for me as well. The discussions and learning materials help give me and my clients so much language to describe our experiences, and help point us onto a path towards holistic healing.

Esther J.

The videos are so helpful, especially...

The videos are so helpful, especially when you talk through examples – it feels fresher in my mind and inspires  me to start thinking about different ways to have my practice grounded in justice.

Will L.

I'm so excited that I'm...

I’m so excited that I’m part of this community and see what comes of it. Everything you’ve put out has been so compassionately thought provoking and ACTIONABLE. I’ve already started talking to clients about it and have printed  them some of your newsletters.

Eri N.

Thank you for your...

Thank you for your encouragement and support. Your passion for social justice is a source of inspiration and contribution to my growth in this profession.

Melanie K.

To see it all put together like this is...

To see it all put together like this is a different experience. There’s so much more to know than I thought. It’s complicated but you make it clear and thought-provoking.

Cassandra C.

I love that it always comes back to...

I love that it always comes back to action. People just talk about understanding too much. It’s time we do something about it and this tells us what we can do about it.

Janelle S.

I always have the framework...

I always have the framework and the checklist on my phone. I use it to make sure justice is part of my day. I think it makes a big difference to have it set up like that.

Elspeth

I'm loving all the ROj content...

I’m loving all the ROJ content – it’s so beneficial to follow along, take the trainings and listen to the podcast. Appreciate you both dedicating so much time to this project and I’m pumped to be in the community.

Michelle C.

I learned so much from...

I learned so much from this course and I am excited to continue learning and growing beyond the classroom. Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom and supporting us all in our journeys of becoming socially responsible counsellors. I feel lucky to be part of a community with instructors that care as much as you do.

Together doesn't have to wait

Deep dive into practice

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.

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. 

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

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.