Steady, Not Silent: The Ethics of Not Looking Away
When the headlines feel relentless and the national temperature keeps rising, it’s not just political discourse—it’s nervous system overload. For many, it’s fear about safety, rights, belonging, and the future. And for therapists, it’s personal too. We live in the same world our clients do.
In this episode of Shrink Rap, we talk about how to care for ourselves and one another during politically charged and destabilizing times—and why that care must extend beyond private coping. We explore what it means to stay grounded without becoming disengaged, compassionate without becoming depleted, and boundaried without becoming silent.
Through a clinical lens, we unpack collective anxiety, moral distress, and the strain of holding space for clients navigating oppression, marginalization, and systemic harm. We offer practical strategies for regulation, community care, and sustainable presence—because burnout helps no one, and reactivity rarely heals.
And we also address the ethical imperative: therapy does not exist in a vacuum. When policies and rhetoric directly impact the safety and dignity of marginalized communities, neutrality can quietly reinforce harm. We discuss why speaking up—within our professional scope and ethical frameworks—is not about partisanship, but about alignment with the foundational principles of our field: beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, and respect for human dignity.
This is a conversation about steadiness with a spine. About tending to your own nervous system so you can show up with clarity and courage. And about remembering that caring for each other, especially those most impacted, isn’t political theater—it’s ethical practice.
Because in heated times, silence is rarely neutral. And care, when done with intention, is both relational and radical.