Caribbean History

Therapy isn’t the only way: Ancestral healing tools we already have

“No one called it ‘group therapy,’ but that kitchen table, covered in flour dust and green seasoning, holds space for truth.”

Let me start by saying this: therapy saved my life. When I walked into Homewood in 2018, I was drowning, and professional help pulled me to shore. Here’s what they don’t tell you; therapy isn’t the only path to healing, and for many of us in the Caribbean community, it’s not even the most accessible one.

At $150+ per session, with waitlists stretching months, and therapists who often don’t understand our cultural context, traditional therapy can feel like another system that wasn’t built for us. You know what was built for us? The healing practices our grandmothers used before “mental health” even had a name.

Bush tea and kitchen medicine

My grandmother didn’t call it “anxiety management” when she brewed cerasee tea every morning. She knew that bitter medicine cleaned more than your blood; it cleared your mind. When stress had me wound tight, my mom would make fever grass tea because her mother taught her it “cools the nerves.”

These aren’t just old wives’ tales. That mortar and pestle? That’s a pharmaceutical preparation. Picking herbs with the moon? That’s understanding plant medicine potency. We’ve been doing holistic healing since before it was trendy.

The healing power of story circles

Every Saturday after grocery shopping, my aunties and mom would gather in someone’s kitchen. They’d share their real-world struggles over soup preparation, because Saturday soup is more than tradition, it’s a therapeutic ritual.

While they’re chopping pumpkins, adding scotch bonnets, and arguing about whether the dumplings are too big, they’re also offering advice seasoned with laughter and, yes, sometimes tears they pretended weren’t falling into the pot.

No one called it “group therapy,” or “peer support counseling,” but that’s precisely what it was. Except this therapy comes with soup to take home.

Over the bubbling pot, problems got smaller.

“You see how dis beef tuff? Jus like yuh situation, you just need fi pressure it likkle more.” These women were therapists who charged nothing, but just expected you to bring provisions next week.

That kitchen table, covered in flour dust and green seasoning, holds space for truth.

Music as medicine

I’ll never forget playing Etana’s “I Am Not Afraid” after treatment. I broke down crying because I finally understood; music carries healing frequencies. Our music is therapeutic technology, whether it is gospel lifting your spirit, reggae grounding your roots, or Soca shaking loose your joy.

During my darkest days, when I couldn’t afford therapy, Beres Hammond taught me vulnerability. That’s sound healing, culturally coded for our specific trauma and triumph.

Movement and breath

We’ve always had dance, not performative, but the kind where you close your eyes and let your body move, when you “catch the spirit” and let it move through you. That’s somatic therapy; releasing trapped trauma through movement, and breath work? Every Caribbean prayer warrior knows about that. When my mother would say, “Tek ah deep breath and give it tuh God,” she was teaching nervous system regulation. We just didn’t need fancy Sanskrit names.

The ultimate medicine: Community

The most powerful healing tool we have is each other. When my world fell apart, it wasn’t just professionals who put me back together. It was: my AA group, my homies from Homewood, my sponsor, and my mom who always knows when to make soup.

We heal in community, because we were wounded in isolation. Community care means showing up, speaking truth, sharing resources, and refusing to let each other suffer alone.

Moving forward

Healing is the new Black, because we’re reclaiming what was always ours. Yes, use therapy if you can access it, but also brew that tea. Share your story. Dance in your kitchen. Breathe with intention. Most importantly, reach out.

These tools helped our ancestors survive the unimaginable. They’re our inheritance. Use them.

Coming Next Time: What They Didn’t Teach Us in School; Finding Mansa Musa at 44

Trending

Exit mobile version