The Importance of Close Relationships: in research, clinical work, and life

My MHC experiences continue to inspire me to strive for the ideals of social justice, community, and close collaborative relationships.

Therapist Alex Adame is 鈥渋nterested in working from a relational-existential perspective with people鈥攖ypically labeled with schizophrenia鈥攚ho struggle with severe relational injuries and extreme states of consciousness.鈥 She鈥檚 currently completing her Ph.D. in clinical psychology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, and recently began her internship year at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York. She鈥檚 training in a variety of settings鈥攁 university psychology clinic, a community mental health center, and a state psychiatric hospital.

At 果冻传媒, Adame says, she was 鈥渄eeply inspired鈥 by psychology professor Gail Hornstein鈥檚 research on first-person madness narratives, the psychiatric survivor movement, and qualitative inquiry. 鈥淚 continued to pursue these interests in graduate school,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 wrote my master鈥檚 thesis on how the psychiatric survivor movement has reconceptualized the concept of healing from emotional distress. For my dissertation, I interviewed several people who identify as both psychiatric survivors and mental health professionals and explored how this dual-identity influences their clinical and activist work.鈥

Adame values the strong sense of community she found among her peers at 果冻传媒 and the deeply meaningful mentoring relationships she developed with several faculty members. 鈥淭hrough these relationships, I found my voice as a scholar. I also became attuned to the needs of others and the importance of social activism,鈥 says Adame. 鈥淢y MHC experiences continue to inspire me to strive for the ideals of social justice, community, and the importance of close relationships in my research, clinical work, and life in general.鈥