Alright, Now What?

Family Violence, Racialized Survivors


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With Simone Saunders, founder of The Cognitive Corner. Family violence refers to many kinds of abuse and neglect in families. Umbrella terms like this can be challenging. They cover a range of experiences, but they can obscure gender and power dynamics in their broadness. Women, girls, and Two Spirit, trans, and non-binary people face family violence at disproportionate rates that are only on the rise in Canada today.  

Umbrella terms can also make it hard to envision how different people experience things differently depending on who they are. For example, survivors with disabilities have shared how abuse perpetrated by family caregivers tends to get ignored because, in popular imagination, we don’t always see how those who take care of us can also hurt us. 2SLBTQIA+ survivors have shared how a family member’s threats of outing them to other family members can be used as a form of control.  

These nuances of abuse are sometimes treated as mere add-ons. What if the devil is in the details? What if exploring nuances can unlock solutions that make millions of people safer? 

Simone Saunders joins us to address family violence in racialized families. Simone is a graduate level Registered Social Worker and therapist in Calgary, Alberta. She is the founder of The Cognitive Corner—a group psychological practice that focuses on providing trauma-informed and culturally responsive psychological care and psychoeducation to Albertans and Ontarians. In the future, The Cognitive Corner seeks to provide accessible and affordable mental health services to racialized communities, due to the current lack of resources. Simone specializes in the treatment of early childhood trauma, racial trauma, and attachment-based issues, using a mixture of somatic-based modalities and critical theory to address societal/structural inequities. In addition, she is a mental health creator and advocate on Instagram and TikTok, where she aims to normalize mental health struggles and provide accessible psychoeducation. 

A note about content: this episode includes discussion of family and gender-based violence. 

Please listen, subscribe, rate, and review this podcast and share it with others. If you appreciate this content, if you want to get in on the efforts to build a gender equal Canada, please donate at ⁠canadianwomen.org⁠ and consider becoming a monthly donor. 

Episode ⁠Transcripts⁠ 

Facebook: ⁠Canadian Women’s Foundation⁠ 

Twitter: ⁠@cdnwomenfdn ⁠ 

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