SPECIAL TO THIS ISSUE

The epitome of redefining professional identity

 

My heart constantly exposed

Unfiltered but passionate I dreamed of a better way

Maybe progress within me will pour into a craft

tired of being the porcelain on a shelf

It was time for a deconstructed self

An utter from the clutter seeps through murmurs of a better time
Twists the knob opening a door of wonders … am I now walking in my purpose?

Allow me to breathe in the freshness of the air
May it fill up my lungs with peace, love, and joy
Allow that to fuel the authenticity
with reflections of new confidence within me
Reminding myself I am the author of my story
But please don’t forsake thee
I’m on an arduous journey

I’ve had to change my hair my tone my clothes my body language to create some
feeling of safety in spaces that don’t create safety for me

When I experience a microaggression I notice in my body I feel a tightness in my
throat and a warm sensation in my body

I feared vulnerability

I mean I’m just a country black girl with a fro
Trying her hardest to help her community grow

With deep-rooted pain
Where will I fit in?

but now as I recall
The beauty in my valley has been in all intersections of me
Embracing the flawed society
While ripping away the baggage that comes with negative core beliefs

I am embedded in this new narrative of therapy
My blackness is not to be feared but revered
And now the filtered streams I’ve discovered in this valley can flow

Helping others grow

 


Inkera Muwwakkil is an associate licensed marriage and family therapist working full-time at a private practice in Chicago. A recent graduate of Adler University’s Master’s Program in Marriage and Family Therapy, Muwwakkil specializes in working with clients of color navigating complex and racialized trauma. She has developed a strong clinical focus on providing culturally informed care to help clients heal and build resilience.

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