Welcome to reflecting on justice

Therapists pursuing collective liberation, together.

For therapists who are eager to be part of a community that walks the talk of anti-oppression. Let’s unlearn oppression and embody justice in + out of the therapy room, together.

 

Sound familiar?

You’ve committed to justice-oriented practice, but it’s just so isolating.

When you’re sitting in front of a client holding up the weight of systemic oppression, you know that therapy-as-usual, just isn’t an option.

You know your commitment to justice-oriented practice means interrupting the damaging and unjust ways we relate to one another. You want to commit to accountability in a world that would much rather have us pretend to be perfect. You want to confront the most misaligned parts of ourselves to find our way back to something bigger than us.

You’re in it, we see you, and you are not alone.

your solidarity besties


“Everything worthwhile is done with other people.”

- Mariame Kaba


Reflecting on Justice was made for you if you want your life + practice to be grounded in anti-oppression, if you feel isolated in justice-doing, and if you want to be part of a community that just gets it.

Start here with your
justice-oriented freebies

 

Align your practice with justice-oriented action

The Essentials Checklist.

This 9-page checklist helps you assess your knowledge, develop sustainable ways of unlearning, define relational considerations, and live your ethics in practice.

Shift power dynamics in your therapy practice

Radicalizing Your Practice 101.

This 5-day challenge kickstarts your transformation towards justice-oriented practice. Get mini video lessons and exclusive audio voice notes for further reflection.

From Passive Awareness to Active Liberation in therapy

Justice Unpacked Webinar.

This 2-hr workshop covers 3 instantly integratable techniques for systems-aware conversations in your sessions, AND how to resist the top 5 mistakes that trip us up in justice-oriented practice.

 

Map yourself to collective liberation

An Expose on Hope.

Get access to a 4-part audio reflection guide to support you when liberatory practice feels hopeless AND our bonus audio series: Mapping Yourself to Collective Liberation that supports you in navigating the most common barriers of this work. By donation.

Build your Ethics practice through Reflection

Not a planner, planner.

Get access to a beautifully designed 40-page planner specifically curated to help you document your collectively liberating action + plan for your growth in liberatory practice through engaging prompts and inspiring quotes. By donation.

Deep dive with comprehensive
training programs*


 

Navigate through blocks with community

the Resisting Collusion Workshop.

Learn to navigate the most common roadblocks to justice-doing with other therapists. This half self-study, half live workshop connects you with your communities of resistance.

UNDERSTAND SYSTEMIC OPPRESSION

Justice Fundamentals: the Training.

Access a comprehensive and nuanced masters-level training program that helps you root your personal understanding and therapy practice in transformative, justice-oriented practice.

Uncover BIases +
track Power

the Practicing Justice Masterclass.

Uncover biases you didn’t know you had with this tried+true questioning sequence that leverages your life experience to build a scaffolding knowledge of how systems of oppression play out.

 

*Our comprehensive training programs are paid offerings that support the work of ROJ + community organizing initiatives.

thoughts from our community thoughts from our community thoughts from our community thoughts from our community thoughts from our community thoughts from our community

Thoughts from
Your Community

 

Therapy is never enough

Our Redistribution Mission;

Reflecting on Justice occupies the unceded, traditional, and ancestral territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh), S'ólh Téméxw (Stó:lō), Qayqayt, and kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem) peoples. Part of our commitment to disrupting the colonial project we benefit from and the duty inherent in our relationship with these lands is to redistribute 50% of all proceeds to Indigenous organizing efforts, independent anti-oppression educators, + mutual aid efforts.

ROJ projects offered by donation contributes 100% of the proceeds towards mutual aid efforts in our communities so our unlearning immediately gives back. As our community grows, the percentage of redistribution will also grow.

Welcome, friend!
Together doesn’t have to wait.


 

I’m Abby (Founder+Facilitator)

I a cis-queer, first-gen, settler currently occupying the stolen, ancestral territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh), S'ólh Téméxw (Stó:lō), Qayqayt, and kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem) peoples. I navigate the world in a neurodivergent, straight-sized body and am working-turned-middle class. My ancestors and I are from Hong Kong, with roots in Chaozhou and Nanjing. My pronouns are She/Her.

  • I’ve had many professional roles in my life - therapist, clinical supervisor, consultant, adjunct faculty member (…and trying to be a human database for liberatory work); but nothing means more to me than facilitating community.

    I firmly believe that if enough of us shift, the world will shift with us; we can’t do this work alone, and we can’t leave each other behind. So come join us in living the imagination of collective liberation. We can’t wait to unlearn and co-create with you!

Hi, I’m Linda (Facilitator)

I’m a cis, able-bodied, hetero-ish racialized settler, born and raised on the stolen, ancestral territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), Səl̓ílwətaʔ /Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) and S'ólh Téméxw (Stó:lō) peoples. I’m a child of first-gen immigrants from the Nakhi/Naxi ancestry and my pronouns are She/Her.

  • Getting into justice and liberation work has been like an itch that continues to grow. The more I unlearn the harmful narratives and approaches that once had me chained, the more questions of curiosity and wonder come up. Why do things have to be this way? Who has the authority to say this about my identity and my experiences?

    I am continuously coming up with creative ways to reclaim back our power; to be in reciprocity with other folks, and to intervene, using my voice to advocate for marginalized folks, collaborating and helping them figure out what this work can look like for themselves. Come join us as discover these new ways to be together!