I am a licensed clinical therapist, self love advocate and owner of North Node therapy... where we provide culturally competent therapeutic services to BIPOC in NY. Our goal is and has always been to normalize people of color getting the support they need to be well mentally, and emotionally.
For generations, conversations about mental health in Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) communities have been silenced, minimized, or dismissed. Many of us grew up hearing phrases like, “What happens in this house stays in this house.” These words were meant to protect our families, but they also created a wall of silence—one that often left us holding pain with no safe outlet.
Mental health struggles were too often framed as a weakness, a betrayal, or something only “other people” sought help for. Therapy was considered a luxury, not a need in the Black and Brown community because we are taught to get over it and tough it out. But today, more people are beginning to realize there is another way. We are finding our voices, sharing our stories, and dismantling the shame that has held us back for far too long. We are reclaiming our right to heal.
Breaking the cycle of silence around mental health is not about rejecting our culture or our families. It’s about embracing wholeness. Acknowledging our mental health needs is not a weakness; it’s an act of liberation. It’s an affirmation that our well-being matters and that we deserve to live lives of peace and joy, not just survival.
The stigma surrounding mental health in our communities did not appear out of nowhere. It’s a complex issue with roots that run deep into our collective history. Understanding these origins is a crucial first step toward dismantling the stigma.
This deep-seated stigma is rooted in a few key areas:
This complex web of factors teaches us to internalize our struggles. We learn to mask anxiety as “stress,” depression as “being tired,” and trauma as “just how life is.” The message is clear: don’t talk about it, don’t name it, and definitely don’t seek help. But keeping everything in comes at a cost. What we don’t heal gets passed down, manifesting in our relationships, our families, and our communities. Many of us are realizing it’s time to break that pattern.
The beauty of this new era is that we are no longer just surviving. We are beginning to thrive. We are speaking up, creating safe spaces, and recognizing that our well-being is not a luxury, but a fundamental human right.
Seeking help for your mental health does not mean you’re broken. It means you’re human. It means you deserve care. For too long, we have been told that our pain is “just the way life is” and that our struggles are a sign of weakness. But the truth is, the very act of seeking support is an incredible show of strength. It is a declaration that you value your own well-being and are willing to do the hard work to achieve it.
Therapy, support groups, and wellness practices do not erase or replace our resilience. Instead, they’re about making that resilience sustainable. They provide tools to process emotions, release trauma, and create healthier ways of being. These practices are not a sign of failure, but a sign of forward movement.
Too often, we confuse endurance with healing. But constantly pushing through without addressing pain isn’t strength—it’s survival mode. And survival mode is not the same as living fully. True strength lies not in how much you can endure, but in your capacity to heal and grow. This is the difference between simply surviving and truly thriving.
The biggest barrier to care often isn’t money or access—it’s the stigma that keeps people from seeking support. The shame, embarrassment, and fear of judgment that come with even considering seeking help can be paralyzing. Many of us worry that going to therapy means we’re “crazy” or that talking about our trauma dishonors our families. Some of us fear being misunderstood by providers who don’t share our cultural background.
But here’s the truth: silence keeps us stuck. Naming what we’re going through is the first and most critical step toward healing. Seeking therapy or support doesn’t diminish your strength—it expands it. When you break the silence, you not only heal yourself but you also give permission for others to do the same.
Imagine a future where our children can talk openly about their feelings without fear of judgment. Where seeking therapy is as normal as going to the doctor for a physical check-up. This future is not a fantasy; it’s a possibility we are building right now, one conversation at a time.
Resilience is powerful. Our communities have survived unspeakable injustices and created beauty, art, and innovation out of struggle. We have been masters of survival. But resilience should not mean carrying pain indefinitely. It’s a foundation, not the end goal. Think of resilience as the foundation of a home. It holds you up, but you still need walls, windows, and a roof. Healing practices—such as therapy, self-reflection, rest, and connection—are what make that home livable. Without them, resilience becomes exhaustion, and our foundation begins to crack.
The goal is not to be tough enough to withstand anything, but to be whole enough to live fully and joyfully. We are a people of incredible strength, and that strength is most beautifully expressed when we have the tools to heal and to thrive.
Change doesn’t happen overnight, but small steps can shift both your personal experience and your community’s culture. You hold the power to start this transformation. Here are five practical steps you can take today:
At North Node Therapy, we believe true healing is both personal and collective. Our therapists are trained to honor the cultural, historical, and systemic realities that shape your experience. We don’t ask you to leave parts of your identity at the door. Instead, we create a space where your story is seen, heard, and respected. Your truth is our starting point. We understand that your healing journey is unique, and we are committed to walking alongside you every step of the way.
Healing is not a solo journey. It happens in community, with support, and through acknowledgment of the full truth of who you are. Our mission is to walk alongside you as you move beyond silence into healing. We are here to support your liberation.
Dismantling mental health stigma in BIPOC communities is not a quick fix—it’s an ongoing process. Every conversation, every therapy session, every act of self-care chips away at generations of silence. When you choose to prioritize your mental health, you are not just healing yourself. You are breaking cycles, creating new patterns, and paving the way for future generations to live without shame.
Silence has protected us in the past, but it cannot sustain us in the future. Healing is not betrayal—it is freedom. And it starts with one step, one conversation, one act of courage. Your healing is an act of revolution. Are you ready to begin?
I am a licensed clinical therapist, self love advocate and owner of North Node therapy... where we provide culturally competent therapeutic services to BIPOC in NY. Our goal is and has always been to normalize people of color getting the support they need to be well mentally, and emotionally.