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Ethics and Boundaries for Liberation-Centered Care
This workshop reframes ethics and boundaries through a liberation-centered lens, expanding beyond compliance to explore how power, identity, culture, and embodiment shape the therapeutic relationship. Participants will learn how to uphold ethical care in ways that resist harm, honor humanity, and create conditions of safety for Black women and those navigating trauma, systemic oppression, and chronic marginalization.
Through case examples, reflective exercises, and practical tools, we will examine the relationship between boundaries, capacity, embodiment, and the nervous system—understanding that ethical practice is not just procedural, but relational and somatically informed.
Participants will learn to:
Apply ethical decision-making through a liberation-centered and culturally-responsive lens
Set, maintain, and communicate boundaries that nurture safety for both client and practitioner
Recognize how internalized scripts and overperformance shape boundary violations
Navigate countertransference, role strain, and emotional labor common in trauma work
Build practices that prevent therapist burnout and support long-term embodiment
Ideal for: Mental health providers, wellness practitioners, community healers, and leaders supporting marginalized communities.
This workshop reframes ethics and boundaries through a liberation-centered lens, expanding beyond compliance to explore how power, identity, culture, and embodiment shape the therapeutic relationship. Participants will learn how to uphold ethical care in ways that resist harm, honor humanity, and create conditions of safety for Black women and those navigating trauma, systemic oppression, and chronic marginalization.
Through case examples, reflective exercises, and practical tools, we will examine the relationship between boundaries, capacity, embodiment, and the nervous system—understanding that ethical practice is not just procedural, but relational and somatically informed.
Participants will learn to:
Apply ethical decision-making through a liberation-centered and culturally-responsive lens
Set, maintain, and communicate boundaries that nurture safety for both client and practitioner
Recognize how internalized scripts and overperformance shape boundary violations
Navigate countertransference, role strain, and emotional labor common in trauma work
Build practices that prevent therapist burnout and support long-term embodiment
Ideal for: Mental health providers, wellness practitioners, community healers, and leaders supporting marginalized communities.