My Personal Journey For Counseling Psychology Programs

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Before coming to the United States, I was not aware of social justice being part of content area in psychology. During my search for counseling psychology programs, I was struck by the fact that particularly counseling psychology carrying the ball in multiculturalism and social justice. My educational and personal/social experiences in the US has instigated my personal journey for the conceptualization of my past life and current position in terms of power and privilege and cultural awareness and sensitivity. Eventually, my perspective has changed in an irrevocable way.
First of all, coming to the US has brought about loss of some my privileges such as language proficiency and citizenship benefits. All of a sudden, I have been a woman of color. At the outset, I did not know I am a minority as an international student. My first eye opening experience was in my ESL program at University of Delaware. An instructor asked us to choose a race category. I asked her what Caucasian means and she said that it means “White.” Then, I said “then, I am Caucasian, my skin is white.” Then, she said “ No you are Asian (I never consider myself as Asian).” I remember how remorseful I felt. More than anything, what hurt me was that somebody assigned me in a category and decided who I was. At that time, I did not know “Whiteness” is a more social construct than a color. Then, I noticed in my country I have a privilege of defining myself. In my personal journey, my effort has been to apply my new realizations to my previous perceptions, in turn, get insights about the experience of minority people in my country. For example, for decades, Kurdish people and other minorities have been marginalized and blamed to be divisive. As opposed to many Kurdish pe...

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...s violence, specifically refugees. We should look at this underserved group through not only clinical lens, but also social justice, which is embedded in the counseling psychology field. My next step is to get in touch with refugee centers in Boston to familiarize myself in person with their problems, to join community service activities and to make connections for future research. To implement the social justice framework, the very foundation of the counseling psychology discipline, we need to be part of social activism and try to reduce social barriers against refugees and immigrants (and other marginalized groups) through publication, research, and practice. Therefore, I feel responsible for use of theory, research and clinical practice as platforms toward social justice applications for underserved populations and ultimately for societal transformation.

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