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Decolonial & Liberation Psychology with Dr. Thema Bryant

59:34
 
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Manage episode 502383655 series 3335930
Content provided by Lisa Danylchuk. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Lisa Danylchuk or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

What does it truly mean to show up whole and authentic in a world that encourages fragmentation? Dr. Thema Bryant doesn't just talk about integration—she embodies it as a psychologist, author, professor, sacred artist, and minister leading transformative work in trauma healing and relationship building.
Dr. Bryant shares her excitement about merging different aspects of her identity and work, challenging the notion that we must compartmentalize ourselves based on context. "I'm excited about not being segregated within myself and with other people, but to be inviting for us to engage with our whole selves," she explains. This radical authenticity creates ripple effects, encouraging others to bring their full humanity into spaces where they've previously felt silenced.
Our conversation explores the powerful frameworks of decolonial and liberation psychology. Decolonial psychology deconstructs harmful colonial impacts—extraction, dehumanization, and power imbalances—while liberation psychology builds a vision for collective freedom. Dr. Bryant challenges the field's arrogance in assuming psychotherapy is the only path to healing, calling for cultural humility and recognition of diverse healing traditions that have sustained communities for generations.
Perhaps most provocatively, Dr. Bryant calls for mental health professionals to embody the healing they claim to facilitate. "I would love us to actually be well," she says, noting how many practitioners suffer from self-erasure and neglect. She critiques training systems that preach self-care while penalizing boundary-setting, and challenges the field's silence on systemic issues affecting mental health.
From the healing power of arts and cultural practices to the importance of releasing relationships that don't serve us, Dr. Bryant offers practical wisdom for navigating our interconnected existence. She reminds us that "liberation is interwoven, it is collective. It cannot be on the backs of other people's bondage."
The conversation closes with a vision of a world with "more ease in our bodies, more ease with each other, more ease in our spirits," while acknowledging the ongoing need for intentional resistance against harmful patterns. Dr. Bryant's integration of psychology, spirituality, arts, and justice work offers a roadmap for authentic, holistic healing that honors our full humanity.
Join us for this soul-nourishing conversation that will transform how you think about healing, relationships, and creating meaningful change in our complex world.

Support the show

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Introduction to Dr. Thema Bryant (00:00:00)

2. Embracing Our Whole Authentic Selves (00:03:34)

3. Decolonial and Liberation Psychology (00:08:03)

4. Building a More Humane Mental Health Field (00:17:37)

5. Arts, Culture, and Embodied Healing (00:26:48)

6. Relationships, Boundaries, and Letting Go (00:44:07)

7. Finding Joy and Creating Change (00:50:52)

8. Closing and Podcast Information (00:57:41)

75 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 502383655 series 3335930
Content provided by Lisa Danylchuk. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Lisa Danylchuk or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

What does it truly mean to show up whole and authentic in a world that encourages fragmentation? Dr. Thema Bryant doesn't just talk about integration—she embodies it as a psychologist, author, professor, sacred artist, and minister leading transformative work in trauma healing and relationship building.
Dr. Bryant shares her excitement about merging different aspects of her identity and work, challenging the notion that we must compartmentalize ourselves based on context. "I'm excited about not being segregated within myself and with other people, but to be inviting for us to engage with our whole selves," she explains. This radical authenticity creates ripple effects, encouraging others to bring their full humanity into spaces where they've previously felt silenced.
Our conversation explores the powerful frameworks of decolonial and liberation psychology. Decolonial psychology deconstructs harmful colonial impacts—extraction, dehumanization, and power imbalances—while liberation psychology builds a vision for collective freedom. Dr. Bryant challenges the field's arrogance in assuming psychotherapy is the only path to healing, calling for cultural humility and recognition of diverse healing traditions that have sustained communities for generations.
Perhaps most provocatively, Dr. Bryant calls for mental health professionals to embody the healing they claim to facilitate. "I would love us to actually be well," she says, noting how many practitioners suffer from self-erasure and neglect. She critiques training systems that preach self-care while penalizing boundary-setting, and challenges the field's silence on systemic issues affecting mental health.
From the healing power of arts and cultural practices to the importance of releasing relationships that don't serve us, Dr. Bryant offers practical wisdom for navigating our interconnected existence. She reminds us that "liberation is interwoven, it is collective. It cannot be on the backs of other people's bondage."
The conversation closes with a vision of a world with "more ease in our bodies, more ease with each other, more ease in our spirits," while acknowledging the ongoing need for intentional resistance against harmful patterns. Dr. Bryant's integration of psychology, spirituality, arts, and justice work offers a roadmap for authentic, holistic healing that honors our full humanity.
Join us for this soul-nourishing conversation that will transform how you think about healing, relationships, and creating meaningful change in our complex world.

Support the show

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Introduction to Dr. Thema Bryant (00:00:00)

2. Embracing Our Whole Authentic Selves (00:03:34)

3. Decolonial and Liberation Psychology (00:08:03)

4. Building a More Humane Mental Health Field (00:17:37)

5. Arts, Culture, and Embodied Healing (00:26:48)

6. Relationships, Boundaries, and Letting Go (00:44:07)

7. Finding Joy and Creating Change (00:50:52)

8. Closing and Podcast Information (00:57:41)

75 episodes

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