Gathering our medicine: strengthening and healing kinship and community

D. Findlay
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Abstract

This article considers the terms culture and healing, critiques perpetuation of colonizing perspectives in conventional trauma-informed mental health approaches, and introduces Gathering Our Medicine, an innovative community framework created by Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish; Coast Salish Peoples Indigenous to the lands of Southern British Columbia, Canada) practitioner Denise Findlay in response to the need for decolonial approaches to mental health for Indigenous communities throughout British Columbia, Canada. The framework encourages re-imagining healing and mental health practices through values such as lateral kindness that draw from distinct traditional Indigenous philosophies, ontologies, and epistemologies. By revitalizing and centring distinctive traditional knowledges about actualization, transformation, and healing, the framework provides a role for allies that disrupts the impulse to deny culpability that Indigenous scholar Susan Dion calls the perfect stranger position. Findlay provides an alternative—the imperfect friend—drawing on kinship practices as effective indirect praxis for collective healing and well-being, transforming the distanced expert into engaged community member.
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收集我们的药物:加强和治愈亲属关系和社区
本文考虑了文化和治疗这两个术语,批评了传统创伤信息心理健康方法中殖民观点的延续,并介绍了收集我们的药物,这是一个由Sḵwx * wú7mesh (Squamish;加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省南部土地上的海岸萨利什土著居民)医生Denise Findlay响应加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省各地土著社区对非殖民化心理健康方法的需求。该框架鼓励通过从独特的传统土著哲学、本体论和认识论中汲取的横向善良等价值观来重新想象治疗和心理健康实践。通过振兴和集中关于实现、转化和治愈的独特传统知识,该框架为盟友提供了一个角色,打破了否认罪责的冲动,土著学者苏珊·迪翁称之为完美的陌生人立场。芬德利提供了另一种选择——不完美的朋友——将亲属关系作为有效的间接实践,用于集体治疗和幸福,将远程专家转变为积极参与的社区成员。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
10.50%
发文量
72
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