How to Be Accessible Beyond the Sliding Scale
An interview with Lindsay Bryan-Podvin, LMSW, about how therapy can be accessible (and not just financially). Curt and Katie chat with Lindsay about capitalism versus money exchange, the social enterprise model, and how therapists can make a good living without feeling like greedy capitalists. We also explore the many different types of accessibility and the importance of setting your fees based on your needs and values rather than as a mechanism to single-handedly fix the broken system or to meet an artificial money goal.
It’s time to reimagine therapy and what it means to be a therapist. To support you as a whole person and a therapist, your hosts, Curt Widhalm and Katie Vernoy talk about how to approach the role of therapist in the modern age.
Interview with Lindsay Bryan-Podvin, LMSW, Mind Money Balance
Lindsay Bryan-Podvin (she/her) is a biracial financial therapist, speaker, and author of the book "The Financial Anxiety Solution." In her therapy practice, Mind Money Balance, she uses shame-free financial therapy to help people get their minds and money in balance. She's expanded her services to help private practice therapists with their money mindset, sustainable pricing, and authentic marketing so they can include financial self-care in their work. She lives with her partner and their dog on the traditional land of the Fox, Peoria, Potawatomi, and Anishinabewaki peoples also known as Michigan.
In this episode we talk about:
How therapy can be more accessible (and not just monetarily)
The money “shit” that gets in the way of us thinking about other options for accessibility
Decreasing stigma and the notion that therapy is by and for white folks
Are we making our practices accessible for all sorts of folks?
ADA compliance, supporting neurodivergent and disabled folks
Cultural competence, the ability to apply that in sessions with clients who are different than us
Being embedded in our communities
Taking therapy out of the shadows
The challenges in getting out and having a larger voice
How accessibility is intertwined with therapist visibility
How to become part of your community in effective and impactful ways
Financial ways to make your practice more accessible beyond sliding scale
Social Enterprise Model: intersection of what you do well, what values you stand for, and what can you get paid well to do
Feeling like a greedy capitalist
What it means to be paid well
How to think about setting your fees
Fee-setting based on what you need to survive and thrive (not capitalist principles)
The problem with “know your worth”
The big cognitive shift required to move from community mental health pricing and work-life balance, fees
Tying money to quality of life, not specific monetary goals
Getting to “enough” not more and more
Capitalism versus money exchange
The wealth of knowledge we have as therapists (and how therapists take it for granted and/or devalue it)
Sharing your knowledge as a mechanism of accessibility to your whole community
To practice self-care, you have to be able to afford it