Posts

The Resilience of Joy: Importance of Cultivating Joy for Black Family Well-Being

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This 10-minute talk offers an autochthonous position, grounded in Optimal Conceptual Theory to understand the psychological well-being of Black families by centering joy as a healing modality. It is geared to academics and clinicians open to considering strengths-based decolonized approaches to working with Black parents and their families. View the full talk here!

When I Was a Kid We Had To…

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My mom very often uses the phrase “your past is your present” and when we look at psychology with an Afrocentric lens there is great emphasis on ancestral knowledge from the frame of “I am because they were.” But when it comes to parenting Black kids in the present day how much of bringing the past into the present is helpful and how much is harmful? On today’s episode of Before the Street Lights Come On, with Jamaal, we talk about bridging the gap between past and present in his parenting of two Black kids. Watch complete episode.

Shifting Paradigms in Psychology

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This doctoral journey I’ve been taking in counseling psychology has illuminated some interesting truths for me. The first is that the research methodologies I’ve learned about in my classes, mostly quantitative methods are limited in nature for an academic who studies Black people. Quantitative methods are great at measuring and analyzing but are not so great at understanding and describing. And what I feel is most lacking in the research on Black parents’ experiences of being Black parents is a more nuanced description and understanding of our experiences.   For this, and other reasons, I’ve chosen to gear my training towards qualitative research because I notice how much scientific inquiry from this methodology is lacking. How can we possibly claim full understanding of humans, if we do not value investigating them with multiple strategies?   I realize in choosing this path I may never become the most renowned psychologist, yet I must do what is in alignment with who I am ...

“In-Smoked:” An Exploration of Intergenerational Trauma

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Today, in honor of my deceased father’s 74 th birthday I share a personal story that reflects the nuanced dynamics of the psychological damage that often occurs in families. My story is unique to me, but I know it shares flavors with other people’s experiences, and I hope that in reading this you may find a piece of yourself and your own healing. My dad loved me deeply. I know he did. He held the vibration of love and adoration for me. In my eyes he did lots of things wrong, but in my heart, he could do no wrong. I felt from him, in his presence, the love and holding that he had for me. I was his princess. His sweetheart. I felt that with all my heart and soul, yet I could not square that feeling with the reality of our human relationship. As a five- or six-year-old, I would sit with him in silence as he watched football. On his lap, the safest place I knew of at the time. While he watched and smoked his cigarettes. While I allowed us to be wrapped in smoke. While I grasped at the...

Beloved Black Parents

Know that you stand on the shoulders of resistance Of ancestors who stood in persistence Know that you are the product of strong genes Of people oppressed by all means Know that you shine as answered prayers of those that came before you Of wise ones who dared to dream of what you can now do Know that you come from their work their toil and their pain Of foundations beneath all you have gained Know that you come from storytellers, drummers and dancers Of acknowledgement of their free souls even without the answers Know that you’re descendant of knowers and seers who listened inside Of survivors and thrivers through the atrocities outside Know that you come from beings who knew their oneness with All Of strong roots firmly planted during the fall Know that you are Divine A manifestation of Their great Joy Of hope Of grace An immaculate expression of faith! By: Keya F. Williams

The Making of the Black Parent: (Re) Claiming and Celebrating the African American Parenting Practices that Sustain Thriving Black Communities

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ABSTRACT This systematic literature review explores the ways in which Black parents’ experiences of interpersonal and vicarious racism impacts parenting strategies and parent-child attachment. Using established guidelines published by PRISMA, 269 studies were identified and subject to abstract review.   Of the 22 articles included in the study, findings suggest that the majority (82%) of empirical studies on this topic focus on racial socialization (41%) and parenting styles (41%), 68% of studies identified used a quantitative over qualitative research design, and none of the included studies approached this topic from an Afrocentric research orientation. Limitations and future directions are discussed. Keya F. Williams, M.Ed.,  Christopher T. H. Liang, Ph.D.,  Chisom F. Onwuegbu, B.A. Lehigh University, College of Education INTRODUCTION Ø   Black lives have lacked the safety and protections afforded to the dominant group in America. Ø   Parenting while ...

Reflections of a Burgeoning Rogerian Therapist 2: Limitations to Person-Centered Therapy in Practice

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As I’ve mentioned in a previous post , I’m deeply inspired by Carl Rogers’ person-centered approach to therapy. However, like anything else, it is not without its shortcomings, and as a clinician that uses this approach with clients, it’s a good idea for me to think critically about the strategies I use. Stages of the Therapeutic Process If we think about a course of therapy as one that is broken down into three stages: 1) exploration, 2) insight, and 3) action, I see Rogerian therapy as most effective when counselor and client are in the exploration and insight stages of therapy. During these stages of therapy, clients are uncovering the roots of their presenting problems and allowed to gain a better understanding of themselves. Person-centered therapists, with our nondirective approach to engaging with clients, seems to be a good fit here. However, I can see that this style of client engagement may become a problem when clients enter the action stage of the therapeutic process. D...