With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities
In With the Wind and the Waves, psychologist Ray M. Droby tells a story of treatment and learning, drawing on experiences ranging from an ocean journey he took on the Bering Sea while serving in a Alaska Native community to his clinical work as a psychologist in rural Alaska. Like negotiating an ocean, Droby moves “with the wind and the waves” while working with substance abuse disorders and mental health issues superimposed on intergenerational trauma and internalized oppression. He captures positive momentum in work aimed at facilitating self-determination with Alaska Natives and their communities while discouraging historical dependency and colonizing patterns of thinking and doing for mental health workers. Sensitive to the history of non-Native outsiders imposing their own culture on Native land, Droby presents here principles, combined with cultural and therapy considerations, that are designed to help people avoid replicating this history of harm. Recognizing the strengths of Alaska Natives and their communities, and the stages of change human individuals and communities undergo, Droby shows how to exercise a nonjudgmental presence as a mental health worker in rural Alaska.
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With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities
In With the Wind and the Waves, psychologist Ray M. Droby tells a story of treatment and learning, drawing on experiences ranging from an ocean journey he took on the Bering Sea while serving in a Alaska Native community to his clinical work as a psychologist in rural Alaska. Like negotiating an ocean, Droby moves “with the wind and the waves” while working with substance abuse disorders and mental health issues superimposed on intergenerational trauma and internalized oppression. He captures positive momentum in work aimed at facilitating self-determination with Alaska Natives and their communities while discouraging historical dependency and colonizing patterns of thinking and doing for mental health workers. Sensitive to the history of non-Native outsiders imposing their own culture on Native land, Droby presents here principles, combined with cultural and therapy considerations, that are designed to help people avoid replicating this history of harm. Recognizing the strengths of Alaska Natives and their communities, and the stages of change human individuals and communities undergo, Droby shows how to exercise a nonjudgmental presence as a mental health worker in rural Alaska.
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With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities

With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities

by Ray M. Droby
With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities
With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities

With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide to Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities

by Ray M. Droby

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Overview

In With the Wind and the Waves, psychologist Ray M. Droby tells a story of treatment and learning, drawing on experiences ranging from an ocean journey he took on the Bering Sea while serving in a Alaska Native community to his clinical work as a psychologist in rural Alaska. Like negotiating an ocean, Droby moves “with the wind and the waves” while working with substance abuse disorders and mental health issues superimposed on intergenerational trauma and internalized oppression. He captures positive momentum in work aimed at facilitating self-determination with Alaska Natives and their communities while discouraging historical dependency and colonizing patterns of thinking and doing for mental health workers. Sensitive to the history of non-Native outsiders imposing their own culture on Native land, Droby presents here principles, combined with cultural and therapy considerations, that are designed to help people avoid replicating this history of harm. Recognizing the strengths of Alaska Natives and their communities, and the stages of change human individuals and communities undergo, Droby shows how to exercise a nonjudgmental presence as a mental health worker in rural Alaska.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781602234178
Publisher: University of Alaska Press
Publication date: 10/15/2020
Series: Alaska
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 150
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Ray M. Droby is a licensed psychologist who has been in the field of mental health for nearly thirty years.

 

Table of Contents

Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

One. With the Wind and the Waves: A Guide for Mental Health Practices in Alaska Native Communities

Two. Guiding Principles for Mental Health Professionals Working in Alaska Native Communities

1. Self-Determination Is an Inalienable Right for Alaska Natives

2. Native Self-Determination Is Best Promoted Through Decentralized Mental Health Services

3. The Role of the Mental Health Professional Imparts a Co-Participatory and Background Presence

4. The Role of the Mental Health Professional Is Multifaceted and Collectively Mindful

Mindset, Transference Issues, and the Strengths of Alaska Native Communities

Collective Colonizing Trauma and Specific Traumas on Native Communities

Culture of Silence

Collectivism

Relational-Cultural Theory

Relational-Cultural Therapy and Multicultural Care

Psychotherapy with Alaska Natives

Case Examples of the 4Rs with Alaska Natives

Initial Treatment Engagement

Parenting and the Use of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)

Strengths Perspective

Trauma-Focused Narrative Therapy with Children

Crisis Intervention

Psychotropic Medication

Bibliotherapy

Self-Determination Versus Dependency

Dependency Patterns

Colonization Patterns

Indigenous Community-Based Approaches to Solving Problems

Tribal Problems, Tribal Solutions

Personal Biases/Worldview

Generalist Orientation

Hurting Helpers

Personal Well-Being (PWB)

Native Spirituality

Native Identity

The Assets Study

Flow

Learning and Communication Styles

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Trust/Mistrust

Working with Schools in Alaska Native Communities

Psychological Testing and Alaska Natives

Psychiatric Disorders, ACEs, Epigenetics, and Alaska Natives

Working with “Resistance” and Stages of Change, Community Readiness, and Healing

Self-Care

Six. Prevention Considerations

Seven. Concluding Thoughts

References

Index

About the Author

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