White Terrorism and Therapy
Curt and Katie chat about the attack on the US Capitol by radicalized Trump supporters. We talk about the role therapists play in addressing white supremacist terrorism, how to support clients in responding to a domestic terror attack, and what therapy looks like for clients who are impacted by Trump supporters or radical rhetoric. We also talk about the challenge of finding compassion, the need for thoughtful communication, and ideas about how to move forward.
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.
In this episode we talk about:
White Supremacy Terrorism, Domestic Terrorism, and the definition of Terrorism
The evolving threat of White Supremacy
Our responses to the domestic terrorism activity, the insurrection at the Capitol
Processing the event in real time during sessions, with clients with double screen
The lack of definition in the role of therapists during this time
Thoughts related to people connecting violence to mental illness
QAnon, other groups and the need to understand what they are, the signs
The different types of clients coming into our office and how to support them
Dealing with the “white stuff” like white apathy, being further removed from the events
Susceptibility to political reactionism
Trauma around safety, responses to the lack of equity, vulnerability, marginalization
The importance of opening conversations and allowing clients to fully express their experience
Supporting clients who have been pushed away from Trump supporters among family or friends
Self-Identity versus Family-Identity
Responding to divisive messages
The complexity of interacting with someone who has been radicalized
The need for community and connection to shift the culture
What to do when a client who is in the process of being radicalized enters your therapy office
The harm of “what about-ism”
Risk factors for radicalization
Conversations beyond Tarasoff and safety planning
Desire for connection, attachment needs
Simplicity of radicalized rhetoric and the goal to dig deeper into underlying needs and goal
The possibility of therapy as a counter to the division
Societal change, needed messaging, taking care of disenfranchised folks
We are pro-human
The need for compassionate communication
Making things real to people who are disconnected and have the option to opt out, so they choose and can re-engage in the societal change that is needed
A reminder to take care of yourselves as therapists during this time