Microaggressions in Therapy: A Call for Humility and Repair

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Even well-meaning therapists can commit microaggressions—subtle, often unintentional comments or actions that marginalize. When this happens, cultural humility becomes critical.

Rather than becoming defensive, a humble response involves owning the mistake and inviting feedback. Saying, “Thank you for telling me, I’ll do better,” can go a long way.

Microaggressions harm trust, but humility can begin the process of repair. It models accountability and growth, which can be empowering for clients.

Therapy is not a space for perfection—it’s a space for presence. Cultural humility ensures that presence is compassionate and accountable.

Kanishka

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