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Warm Soft Eyes in a Harsh World: Linda Thai on Refugee Resilience, Humiliation, and Belonging In this intimate, wide-ranging conversation, Janina Fisher and therapist, educator, and former child refugee Linda Thai explore what it means to live, work, and speak from a body shaped by war, displacement, and structural oppression—while also becomi
Durée : 51:23
In this intimate, wide-ranging conversation, Janina Fisher and therapist, educator, and former child refugee Linda Thai explore what it means to live, work, and speak from a body shaped by war, displacement, and structural oppression—while also becoming a “celebrity” in the mental health world. Together they name the “mental health speaker celebrity industrial complex,” the imposter parts that never quite go away, and the quiet cost of being placed on a pedestal while still longing to feel like you truly belong.
Linda shares how her refugee history lives in her nervous system as future-oriented survival strategies—like always carrying her passport or mapping exit plans in response to the current political climate in the U.S.—and how the wilds of Alaska, dogs, and the rhythms of land, seasons, and subsistence living have slowly helped repair her sense of safety and synchrony. Janina reflects on privilege, boundaries, and learning to let in applause and appreciation, while Linda names humiliation as a core, often unnamed wound in the experience of being “othered.”
For clinicians, this conversation offers both personal and clinical wisdom: how we think about refugee and immigrant clients, how we recognize non-human relationships and nature as sources of attachment and regulation, how we soften the “white gaze,” and how we bring more heart, soul, and judicious self-disclosure into our teaching and therapy spaces without losing our professional center.
Imposter syndrome doesn’t just “go away.” Janina and Linda normalize imposter feelings as lifelong companions—especially for those who did not grow up with a gut-level sense of belonging—and explore how purpose and mission can coexist with ongoing self-doubt.
Humiliation as a core wound of othering. Linda names humiliation as a central, under-discussed wound in collective experiences of racism, xenophobia, and being cast as “unwanted,” beyond the more familiar language of shame, self-loathing, or harsh inner critics.
Refugee trauma as future-oriented survival strategy. Linda describes always carrying her passport and planning an exit route as trauma-shaped, future-oriented strategies that live in the present—illustrating how political conditions can re-activate refugee terror and planning.
Privilege and the “mental health celebrity industrial complex.” Janina reflects on learning about privilege through collaborations on implicit bias, and both she and Linda unpack what it means to be visible, admired, and sometimes de-personed within a conference culture that elevates “names” while blurring boundaries.
Nature, Alaska, and more-than-human attachment. Living in rural Alaska, hunting, fishing, gardening, and tracking the seasons helped Linda reconnect with cyclical rhythms after trauma’s disruption of internal and interpersonal timing. She highlights the clinical importance of including pets, land, and non-human relationships when asking about clients’ support systems.
Dogs, nervous systems, and attachment in the therapy room. Both clinicians note how the presence of dogs shifts nervous systems—Janina’s clients become more regulated, and Linda can often read a client’s attachment style more clearly from how they interact with their dog than from formal checklists.
From deprivation-based needing to wholehearted wanting. Linda shares how years of “I don’t need anyone” survivalism gradually transformed into an ability to want and need people from a place of joy rather than deprivation—an arc that mirrors many trauma survivors’ journeys.
Softening the white gaze and taking in warm, soft eyes. Linda describes how “white gaze” can trigger performance and appeasement parts, while intentionally orienting toward “warm, soft eyes” changed her experience of audiences. Janina, in turn, reflects on consciously softening her own gaze as a white clinician to communicate safety and respect.
GUID : d060a1d8-1017-43af-a034-452c630b198e
Date de publication : 25/2/2026 à 07:00:00