'The Power of Connection'
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About this listen
2. Personal Journey and Identity Formation
- Kate Webber
- 's Aboriginal heritage and connection to multiple nations
- Influence of family (grandmother, mother, and father's service) on identity and generosity
- Childhood experiences facing discrimination and racism
- Navigating conflict between pride in Aboriginal identity and external negativity
- Carrying forward family legacy and sense of service
- Impact of racism during primary school
- Lack of Aboriginal perspective in education (focus on colonization, Captain Cook projects)
- Struggles with shame and belonging
- Code-switching and hiding identity in unsupportive environments
- Importance of family and community in fostering pride
- Early experiences of racism, bullying (relating to Aboriginal and Chinese heritage)
- The role of family and community support in building confidence
- Connection between lived experience and academic/professional interest in psychology
- Mental health struggles in family history (grandmother’s depression, intergenerational impacts)
- Personal battles: low self-esteem, relationship difficulties, recovery from trauma
- Power and importance of connection during crisis
- Steps toward regaining autonomy and control
- Building supportive relationships outside toxic environments
- Advances in self-care: regaining interests, healthier routines, addressing eating disorders
- Gradual process of building resilience and confidence
- Impact of systemic racism and poverty (housing, education, social support)
- Inequity in government responses, resources, and societal structures
- Racism embedded in systems affecting Aboriginal families
- The importance (and gap) of culturally informed systems
- Definition and examples of the racial empathy gap
- Media’s role in perpetuating disparity in empathy and reporting
- Importance of accurate assessment for effective treatment
- Critiques of mainstream frameworks and need for culture-bound syndromes
- Negative consequences of misassessment in child protection and mental health
- Critique of “West is Best” and “White is Right” mentalities
- Misguided attempts at tokenistic inclusion of Aboriginal perspectives
- Need for systemic overhaul, genuine power-sharing, and cultural equity
- Challenges of addressing siloes vs interconnected systems in Aboriginal policy (e.g., Close the Gap)
- Positive outcomes when First Nations people lead program design
- Importance of safe spaces and empowerment in professional and community development
- Leading leadership and development programs with successful results
- Advocacy for elevating Aboriginal voices, genuine co-design, and decision-making power
- Artistic influences and background (family of artists and musicians)
- Role of art and creative writing/music in processing trauma and emotions
- Interest in art therapy as a modality for healing
- Healing power of storytelling, slam poetry, and creative arts in Indigenous and marginalized communities
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In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.