We are uninvited settlers occupying the stolen, territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), S’ólh Téméxw (Stó:lō), Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh), Qayqayt, and kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem) peoples. Our relationship with these lands dictates our commitment to understanding the ongoing impacts of colonization and decolonizing our practices in and out of the counselling room.
Looking for practitioner resources and a like-minded community to unlearn systemic oppression together? Reflecting on Justice is for therapists who are eager to be part of a community that walks the talk of anti-oppression. Let’s unlearn oppression and embody justice in + out of the therapy room, together.
Check out our extensive array of free resources and comprehensive courses to support your liberatory therapeutic practice!
This free 9-page checklist is a great roadmap/mini audit to start with to integrate more justice-oriented practices in your work and life. It also gives an overview of the big 9+ systems of oppression.
Our super accessible framework to uncover biases you didn’t know you had. In this crash course masterclass you’ll learn frameworks to:
It's an accessible guide to add more contextual consciousness into your life and work, build on your personal reflexivity practice, and start transforming the way you show up in professional and personal spaces.
This 5-day challenge helps you shift power dynamics in therapy by looking at 5 key areas of your practice that you can realign with your collective ethics. It includes an exploration to define your personal collective ethics, considerations for structuring safety and radicalizing your intake forms, as well as how we can create cultures of collaboration and communities of accountability.
We took our decades+ of experience teaching & practicing justice-oriented therapy and distilled it into foundational frameworks that you can implement into your practice. We cover top 5 most common myths and mistakes therapists encounter as they develop their justice-oriented practice (and how to resist them), how we can weave analyses of context into any therapeutic conversation, including conversations with folx who have different politics, and how to address harm and move towards repair with clients.
Let’s just call it what it is – ethical practice requires so much more of us than 1 or 2 courses in grad school.
You did all the reflection assignments + waded through all the roleplays. You added book after book (…after book!) to your To-Read list…But as you sit with clients, you just can’t shake how unequipped you feel when it comes to effectively responding to lived experiences of harm and oppression.
You know that ethical practice requires us to resist neutrality within oppressive systems, that it requires us to speak truth to power, and critique the colonial ways of being we’ve been trained up in…but how?
And why does it feel so lonely?
Imagine what it would be like if you could…
Justice Fundamentals was created specifically to help you transform your practice with intersectional, anti-oppressive, liberatory ethics!
You get the most access to us and community inside this program, with bi-weekly live debriefs and deep dives, our full pre-recorded 15-module program, all the learning guides we’ve created to help you deepen your unlearning, and our continuously updating resource list.
PLUS! The program qualifies for 78 CE credits!
Deepen your unlearning through guided reflection & tracking intentional action. This half-planner, half-guide was especially curated to help you document your collectively liberating action and plan for your growth in liberatory practice through engaging prompts and inspiring quotes.
Get access to a beautifully designed 40-page specifically curated to help you document your collectively liberating action + plan for your growth in liberatory practice through engaging prompts and inspiring quotes. By donation.
This audio series is offered by donation, with 100% of the proceeds donated to supporting Palestinian, Congolese, and Sudanese resistance. This is our messy, imperfect attempt to have the examination of our complicities as people occupying stolen lands in the global north; as people who’s lineage was also directly impacted by the colonial violence that allows us to occupy this space; to be useful to the active resistance in one way or another.
In this 4-part audio reflection series, we will be examining liberatory hope as dreaming, exploring the connectivity between solidarity, witnessing, and mourning while critiquing the normalization of forced intimacy and the trap of empathy, and look at the joys of liberatory practice and witnessing.
50-100% of proceeds from by-tuition and by-donation offerings goes towards supporting lower cost counselling for SDQTBIPOC+ folx at Prospect Counselling and/or local mutual aid efforts in so-called BC.