Demystifying the model minority complex
12-week virtual consultation group for Asian American therapists & Healers
This group is for licensed Asian American therapists and healers to explore the “Model Minority Complex” - an intertwined set of personal, familial, historical, cultural, and racial stories that cast Asian Americans as docile, hard-working, high-achieving, apolitical, socially inept, frugal, self-sacrificing, and inscrutable. These stories, absorbed from various sources, can have a deep, unconscious impact.
We will explore the Model Minority Complex as a gateway to our interconnected internal and external topography: sociohistorical contexts in both the United States and on the continent of Asia, oppressive dynamics and systems; and intergenerational, ancestral, and personal stories.
In traveling this path together, we will begin restoring our connections with our souls, purpose, ancestors, and the wider web of life through ritual, creative practice, and community.
Guiding questions will include:
How can we re-imagine our perspectives on our worth, time, labor, relationships, voices, and bodies?
How can we reclaim our birthrights of belonging, dignity, and relationality?
What does a future that we long for look, smell, feel, sound like?
How we can be part of a story of interconnection with the more-than-human world?
participants will leave the group with:
A more conscious relationship with their own Model Minority Complex
A roadmap for further healing
A psycho-decolonial-spiritual lens through which to help their Asian American clients
A seed of their own unique medicine for the world and clarity on next steps on nurturing it
Resources and supportive community for ongoing transformation
WHY DOES THE MODEL MINORITY COMPLEX MATTER?
I think of the Model Minority Complex as a knot in a garden hose where the water is our life force energy. As long as we’re beholden to the knot, there’s no flow—of energy, of our souls, of our life force.
We may not even realize we’re tied up in a knot, so acknowledging this is the first step. From there, we can slowly begin to untangle it by seeing where the strands originated, examining their contours, identifying where they touch other strands, and slowly picking them apart. Over time, the water can begin to flow freely through and out of the hose, nourishing whatever life it needs to.
It matters because in not attending to it, we are blocking access to our voices, our power, our potential, and our collective strengths. It matters because it may be stopping your own flow, and that means less goodness for the collective in a time when we need your unique medicine more than ever.
Three 4-week modules
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Module 1: Stories of Separation & Supremacy
This module de-naturalizes Asian American racialization, links it to oppressive systems and the current polycrisis, and explores some of its collective dynamics.
Topics include: Mapping the Terrain of the Model Minority Complex; Stuck “In-Between”; Containing Inscrutability; Microaggressions as Collective Transmissions.
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Module 2: Liminality
Engaging both the psychic and social, this module unpacks the conditions, contracts, and mechanisms that allow the Model Minority complex to proliferate individually and collectively. This “messy middle” will be a chrysalis for transformation through personal and group reflection.
Topics include: The (Asian) American Dream; Importable/Exportable Bodies; Exploitable Labor; Exile, Dissociation, & Ghostliness.
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Module 3: Making Medicine
This module will focus on various realms that call for reconnection, explore practices for cultivating animist values, and offer opportunities for informal case consultation.
Topics include: Earth & Cycles of Life-Death-Rebirth; Heart, Soul & Purpose; Ancestors & Spirit; Collective Dreaming.
Content
We will draw upon trauma-informed literature, parts work, depth psychology, Asian American studies, anthropology, liberatory frameworks, restorative justice, Indigenous knowledge, philosophy, and animism, as well as our lived experiences to unpack the psychic, social, material, and spiritual implications of the Model Minority Complex on Asian American lives.
FORMAT
Each 90-minute session will include a brief didactic introduction to a topic, group discussion, experiential/reflective practice, and resources for further learning. We will not meet the week between modules to allow for integration of the material.
Throughout the group container, opportunities for creative expression and ritual practice will be offered. Finally, at the conclusion of the series, Natalie will provide support for the group to continue meeting independently if they wish.
This group offers:
New ways to conceptualize your own relationship with the Model Minority Complex, as well as your clients’
Sociohistorical, liberatory, and spiritual lenses through which to view symptoms, presenting concerns, and personal and collective trauma
A supportive, playful space in which to clarify your own purpose and unique medicine
Belonging with like-minded Asian American wellness professionals
Rituals, practices, resources, and community to support reconnection to the Earth, soul, body, ancestors, and spirit
Deeper understanding of concepts, vocabulary, history, and social dynamics regarding Asian American racialization
Increased understanding of the links between Asian American racialization, current (social, eco, spiritual) polycrisis, interlocking systems of oppression (white supremacy, anti-Blackness, capitalism, settler colonialism, American Imperialism) and how these may show up in your everyday life
YOU MAY be a good fit if you:
Are an Asian American psychotherapist, wellness practitioner, or space-holder who has been socialized as a model minority
Want more clarity about the Model Minority Complex its impact
Yearn for more internal freedom, harmony, and self-compassion, and access to a wider spectrum of emotions
Want to contribute during the current polycrisis, but don’t know how, or feel powerless, stuck, or isolated in your path
Long for liberation from internalized oppression and greater accountability
Value decolonial, spiritual, ancestral, and Earth-honoring perspectives
Hunger for nuanced conversations about Asian American racialization
Want to better position self in the social justice landscape by being able to move through being frozen by guilt, shame, anxiety, rage, and/or confusion
Want a different perspective from the usual anthropocentric and strictly political discussions of power, privilege, and disadvantage
Are spiritually curious, but skeptical and/or don’t know where/how to start
Module 1: February 5, 12, 19, 26
Module 2: March 12, 19, 26, April 2
Module 3: April 16, 23, 30, May 7
Thursdays
11AM-12:30PM ET | 10-11:30am CT | 9-10:30am MT | 8-9:30am PT
INVESTMENT: $800
Up to 1/4 of the spots will be designated as sliding scale ($650)
Bespoke payment plans available
details
FAQs
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This group is intended to be inclusive while also maintaining integrity as an affinity space. That said, I’ll explicitly invite multiracial people and transracial adoptees, and anyone of Asian ancestry who feels you have been socialized as a model minority.
I’ll also acknowledge that this usually refers to people of East, Southeast, South Asian ancestry, but this is not an exhaustive list. I should also mention that much of the presented material in Modules 1 and 2 will tend to focus on the relationships/dynamics between the U.S. and East and Southeast Asia (e.g. Chinese Exclusion Act, Japanese Internment, Cold War) because these early histories set the stage for future racialization of other waves of Asian immigrants. I want to be forthright about this in order to help potential participants make the right decision for them and would be happy to discuss this further in a consultation. -
Animism is the worldview that everything around is alive and has a spirit—plant, land, other animals, etc.—and that humans are but one expression of creation and nature. Contrast this with the more commonly adopted modern viewpoint of human supremacy that places humans in a position above “nature.” This hierarchy allows humans to feel entitled to do whatever they wish to the other-than-human entities.
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During the COVID-19 pandemic, I experienced a condensed process of what I’d been undergoing my entire life—an exploration of my Asian Americanness (through writing, my clinical work, and therapy). It was painful and necessary, and I wish I hadn’t had to do it alone.
This group is the culmination of many of the projects I’ve been working on for over ten years: writing my dissertation about Asian Americanness in psychology and psychoanalysis; clinical work with 1.5 and 2nd generation Asian Americans; running IFS-informed groups for Asian American women; developing a course on the Material and Psychic Preoccupations of Asian Americans for The Center for Asian American Psychoanalysis; my research on Asian American racialization; and my training in Ancestral Lineage Healing through the Ancestral Medicine network. All of this makes me uniquely positioned to offer a viewpoint that integrates psychological, familial, cultural, decolonial, sociohistorical, ancestral, and spiritual perspectives, which I haven’t seen represented in other Asian American affinity spaces.
Finally, I love to teach, and hope that working with Asian American healers will have a greater ripple effect for the collective.
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This largely depends on interest and fit, but I am aiming for 6-8 participants, and would cap the group at 12.
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I will provide readings/resources to explore between sessions, but I’m not a fan of assigning “homework.” It’s up to you the level and extent to which you engage with them.
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Yes, I’m happy to offer a payment plan that works for you. You can set the amount and payment dates. — I just ask that the first payment be made before the first session and the last payment be made by the last session. We will agree to the terms of your payment plan in advance.
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The sliding scale spots are intended for people who are in financial need: for instance clinicians who are in the first five years of their career or who serve underserved populations that don’t have access to material resources. I won’t ask you to provide proof, we’ll just have a transparent and honest conversation about it.