Is Therapy Political? With Allyson Inez Ford, MA, LPCC episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 26, 2025 · 53 MIN

Is Therapy Political? With Allyson Inez Ford, MA, LPCC

from EDeology: The People Behind Today's Eating Disorder Treatment Landscape · host Elka Cubacub

Is it a therapist’s responsibility to advocate for social justice, to take a stance on political issues that impact the lives of their clients and/or minoritized groups? Or are therapists supposed to be apolitical, to enter the therapy space without an ideological agenda so they can hold space for whatever belief systems the client brings in?When we remove the “shoulds” the “supposed tos”, the moralistic judgements of what makes a good or bad therapist or a good or bad person, what we’re left with are very impactful clinical questions: What role do systemic forces play in the issues we face as individuals? What impact does acknowledging those systemic forces have on a person’s healing process? How do we address shame and internalized oppression in a way that empowers rather than disables? And how do we make impactful political issues speakable in the therapy space?In this episode, Allyson Inez Ford talks about the role that understanding systemic oppression played in her own recovery from an eating disorder. She talks about the systems that shape us, the role that politics plays in how she holds the therapy space, and how she relates to clients and others who hold different, and potentially very triggering, political viewpoints.Because one thing that is for certain is that so many people are holding so much pain around current events. We cannot shy away from these topics.Allyson Inez Ford, LPCC, is a licensed mental health therapist specializing in eating disorders and obsessive-compulsive disorder. She has experience working with adults and adolescents in individual, group, and family therapy across multiple levels of care. Her work is informed by a liberatory and anti-oppression perspective.She has a particular interest in supporting individuals with multiple marginalized identities, informed by her own experience as a multiracial, neurodivergent, and queer clinician. Allyson owns and operates a group private practice, hosts a podcast focused on eating disorders and social justice, and participates in speaking engagements and professional trainings. She also provides consultation for complex clinical cases.More on AllysonInstagram: @bodyjustice.therapist Website: www.eatingdisorderocdtherapy.comBody Justice Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/1jvTCV9IJ1YpIym9YmZQda?si=e9872c6dbef24dc5More on Elka: https://cubacubcounseling.com/ Elka’s book, Binge Eating Demystified https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FD493WZ3

Is it a therapist’s responsibility to advocate for social justice, to take a stance on political issues that impact the lives of their clients and/or minoritized groups? Or are therapists supposed to be apolitical, to enter the therapy space without an ideological agenda so they can hold space for whatever belief systems the client brings in?When we remove the “shoulds” the “supposed tos”, the moralistic judgements of what makes a good or bad therapist or a good or bad person, what we’re left with are very impactful clinical questions: What role do systemic forces play in the issues we face as individuals? What impact does acknowledging those systemic forces have on a person’s healing process? How do we address shame and internalized oppression in a way that empowers rather than disables? And how do we make impactful political issues speakable in the therapy space?In this episode, Allyson Inez Ford talks about the role that understanding systemic oppression played in her own recovery from an eating disorder. She talks about the systems that shape us, the role that politics plays in how she holds the therapy space, and how she relates to clients and others who hold different, and potentially very triggering, political viewpoints.Because one thing that is for certain is that so many people are holding so much pain around current events. We cannot shy away from these topics.Allyson Inez Ford, LPCC, is a licensed mental health therapist specializing in eating disorders and obsessive-compulsive disorder. She has experience working with adults and adolescents in individual, group, and family therapy across multiple levels of care. Her work is informed by a liberatory and anti-oppression perspective.She has a particular interest in supporting individuals with multiple marginalized identities, informed by her own experience as a multiracial, neurodivergent, and queer clinician. Allyson owns and operates a group private practice, hosts a podcast focused on eating disorders and social justice, and participates in speaking engagements and professional trainings. She also provides consultation for complex clinical cases.More on AllysonInstagram: @bodyjustice.therapist Website: www.eatingdisorderocdtherapy.comBody Justice Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/1jvTCV9IJ1YpIym9YmZQda?si=e9872c6dbef24dc5More on Elka: https://cubacubcounseling.com/ Elka’s book, Binge Eating Demystified https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FD493WZ3

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Is Therapy Political? With Allyson Inez Ford, MA, LPCC

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This episode was published on November 26, 2025.

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Is it a therapist’s responsibility to advocate for social justice, to take a stance on political issues that impact the lives of their clients and/or minoritized groups? Or are therapists supposed to be apolitical, to enter the therapy space without...

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