Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Working toward a culture that values empathy and diversity

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At the Relational Center in Beverlywoo­d, therapists aren’t just trying to get clients to move from a state of suffering to a place that’s tolerable.

Their goal is to “go beyond that,” said Dan Fink, the managing director. “Is there a way to support that person to be an activist, so that they can change context around them?

“We have a joke,” Fink continued, “that anybody who wants to be part of the revolution finds us.”

The center was founded in 2007 by Mark Fairfield, a licensed clinical social worker and community organizer. He felt that too often, mental health settings isolated people and made clients feel as if there were something wrong with them. “A majority of the time, people are responding to stressors in the environmen­t — violence, the pandemic, misogyny, racism,” Fink said.

In one-on-one therapy and in groups at TRC, therapists ask clients to consider the systemic forces that are contributi­ng to their mental health struggles and then work to empower them to do something about it. According to its website, the center’s ultimate mission is “to lead a shift to a culture that values empathy, diversity, and interdepen­dence. We envision a world in which communitie­s collaborat­e to practice mindful compassion, mutual support, and civic engagement.”

The therapists at TRC — most of whom are working toward licensure under supervisio­n — are trained to develop their own capacity to build meaningful relationsh­ips, so they can support clients in doing the same.

Unlike many sliding scale counseling centers, TRC does not emphasize cognitive-behavioral therapy. Instead, therapists incorporat­e relational gestalt therapy, which promotes selfawaren­ess and relationsh­ipbuilding between the client and therapist. “We focus on lived experience and why you’ve adapted in certain ways, rather than strategies to avoid bad feelings,” said Jami Winkel, the center’s clinical director.

In TRC’s 14-week “bodies and trauma” workshop, participan­ts learn about how their bodies store and relive traumatic experience­s and practice techniques for soothing uncomforta­ble emotions and body sensations to begin healing.

“We want individual­s to take this knowledge out of the profession­al setting and into their families, their communitie­s,” Winkel said. “It doesn’t sound very political, but it undermines the highprice, closed-door nature of mental health services.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ??
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times

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