My Clinical Approach
My clinical approach is grounded in decolonized and Indigenous frameworks that honor cultural identity, relational accountability, and community‑based ways of knowing. I view healing as a holistic and relational process, shaped by historical, social, and environmental contexts rather than individual pathology alone. Central to my work is challenging colonial and deficit‑based models of care while centering lived experience, resilience, and self‑determination.Alongside decolonized approaches, I integrate evidence‑based Western modalities to support individualized and effective treatment. These include Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Motivational Interviewing (MI), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Family Systems Theory, and person‑centered approaches. These frameworks are applied flexibly and collaboratively, with an emphasis on client goals, values, and readiness for change, particularly in work related to substance use and gambling addiction.My practice is further informed by ecological and person‑in‑environment perspectives, recognizing that individual well‑being is deeply influenced by family systems, community relationships, cultural context, and broader structural conditions. By integrating Indigenous knowledge systems with Western clinical models, I aim to provide care that is ethical, culturally responsive, trauma‑informed, and aligned with the whole person within their lived environment.