Storying survival: An approach to radical healing for the Black community

J Couns Psychol. 2023 Apr;70(3):276-292. doi: 10.1037/cou0000635.

Abstract

Anti-Black racism (ABR) contributes to racial trauma and to the disproportionate negative mental, physical, and social outcomes faced by Black populations (Hargons et al., 2017; Wun, 2016a). The previous literature demonstrates that storytelling and other narrative interventions are often used to promote collective healing among Black people (Banks-Wallace, 2002; Moors, 2019). Storying survival (i.e., the utilization of stories to promote liberation from racial trauma) is one such narrative intervention (Mosley et al., 2021); however, little is known about the processes by which Black people utilize storying survival to promote radical healing. Using an intersectional framework and thematic analysis from a phenomenological perspective (Braun & Clarke, 2006), the present study analyzed interviews from 12 racial justice activists in order to understand how these activists engage in storying survival to foster Black survival and healing. Results show that storying survival includes five interconnected components: storying influences, mechanisms of storying survival, content of storying survival, context of storying survival, and impact of storying survival. Each of these categories and subcategories are detailed herein and are supported with quotations. The findings and related discussion explore the concept of storying survival and its contributions to critical consciousness, radical hope, strength and resistance, cultural self-knowledge, and collectivism among participants and their communities. This study therefore provides important and practical information about how Black people and the counseling psychologists who aim to serve them can utilize storying survival to resist and heal from ABR. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

MeSH terms

  • Communication
  • Humans
  • Narration*
  • Racism* / psychology
  • Self Concept