Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Jilya
Jilya: How one Indigenous woman from the remote Pilbara transformed psychology | Tracy Westerman
3 posts | 1 read
From humble beginnings in the remote Pilbara, psychologist and Nyamal woman Tracy Westerman has redefined what' s possible at every turn. Despite neither of her parents progressing past primary school, and never having met a psychologist before attending university, Tracy was the first Aboriginal person in Australia to complete a PhD in Clinical Psychology, rising to become one of the country' s foremost psychologists. Against significant odds, she commenced her own private business to challenge the way the mental health profession responds to cultural difference, and recently established a charitable foundation and scholarship program to mentor Indigenous people from our highest-risk communities to become psychologists. Tracy draws on client stories of trauma, heartbreak, hope and connection from her years of practice, offering a no-holds-barred reflection on how the monocultural, one-size-fits-all approach to psychology is failing Aboriginal people and how she' s healing those wounds. Jilya is a story of drive and determination, of what it takes to create change when the odds are stacked against you. Above all, it is a story of one woman' s love for her people.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
MrsMalaprop
post image
Pickpick

“If you are sharing space, but not sharing power, it‘s tokenism”. Ooph 💯
This is a powerful memoir and Tracy Westerman is an incredible human. It seems beyond frustrating that Tracy‘s knowledge and skills are not being leveraged by government. ‘Know better do better‘ is not being applied 🤯. I need to go away and think on this some more…#buildanarmy.

quote
MrsMalaprop
post image

I did not know that Tracy was a year ahead of me, completing almost the same undergraduate degree, at the same university. Unlike me, she has gone on to do AMAZING things in the profession.

Edit: just figured out that we were in THE SAME year. 🤯

Jeg Hey hey you have contributed in a quiet but excellent way to your profession, I should know , I taught for 40 years and you were the best school psychologist ever in all my time. 1mo
MrsMalaprop @Jeg How lovely of you to say so. I loved working with you too and am so glad we‘ve stayed in touch 💕. 1mo
27 likes2 comments
quote
MrsMalaprop
post image

Have been meaning to read this memoir by Western Australian Nyamal psychologist Tracy Westerman since it came out last year. A couple of weeks ago I was lucky enough to see Tracy give the Curtin University annual human rights lecture, which pushed me to get on and read it.
It still stuns me that Australian Aboriginal people were required to apply for citizenship if they wanted to be treated like everyone else, as recently as the 1960‘s 🤯.

Dilara This policy is incredibly offensive on so many levels! 1mo
MrsMalaprop @Dilara it sure is and I don‘t believe Australians know (or care) about it and the reverberations to this day. 1mo
Rissreadswithcats I did not know this! I am speechless and so bloody angry! 1mo
35 likes3 comments