Two Black women embrace in a warm, affirming hug, visually representing emotional support, cultural understanding, and the healing power of being seen and held in community.

Racial trauma can impact your mind, body, and sense of safety. Learn how therapy helps BIPOC clients heal from race-based stress, reclaim emotional space, and feel seen in their full humanity.

Racial trauma isn’t just something you “get over.” It can live in your body, shape your thoughts, and quietly drain your emotional energy, especially when ignored, minimized, or normalized.

If you’ve experienced racism, discrimination, or the cumulative stress of navigating oppressive systems, you may be carrying racial trauma. And you deserve a space to unpack it, with a therapist who sees the whole picture.

What Is Racial Trauma?

Racial trauma refers to the psychological and emotional harm caused by direct or indirect exposure to racism. This can include:

  • Personal experiences of discrimination, harassment, or violence

  • Microaggressions in school, work, or healthcare

  • Vicarious trauma from witnessing violence or injustice (e.g., news, social media)

  • Chronic stress from code-switching or navigating white-centered spaces

  • Feeling unsafe, unseen, or devalued in your identity

Racial trauma is real, and its effects can mirror those of other forms of trauma.

How Racial Trauma Can Show Up in Daily Life

You may experience:

  • Hypervigilance or feeling “on guard” in specific environments

  • Fatigue or numbness from constantly pushing down on reactions

  • Imposter syndrome or self-doubt rooted in systemic bias

  • Anxiety, depression, or feelings of invisibility

  • Anger or grief that feels hard to name or express

  • Physical symptoms (headaches, sleep disruption, body tension)

Often, people don’t realize these reactions are connected to racialized experiences, especially if they’ve never had the space to process them.

You Don’t Have to “Tough It Out” Alone

For many BIPOC clients, there’s a pressure to be resilient at all costs. But healing racial trauma doesn’t mean proving your strength; it means reclaiming your right to softness, safety, and joy.

Therapy offers a space to:

  • Speak freely about your experiences without educating your therapist

  • Explore how identity, history, and systemic harm intersect

  • Build emotional regulation skills for race-related stress

  • Reclaim your voice, your boundaries, and your rest

  • Be seen, heard, and affirmed in your full humanity

Work With Cardelia Dischert, LMHC

Cardelia Dischert, LMHC, brings over 18 years of experience as a culturally responsive therapist supporting BIPOC clients, immigrants, and individuals navigating identity-based harm. She understands how racial trauma impacts your mental health and how to help you heal with care, skill, and respect.

You Deserve a Space That Sees All of You

Racial trauma isn’t “too small” or “too big” to bring to therapy. If you’re feeling heavy, disconnected, or invisible, you don’t have to carry it alone.

Book a consultation with Cardelia Dischert, LMHC, and start your healing on your terms.

Cardelia Dishert LMHC, Senior Therapist & Wellness Consultant (IV)

Cardelia Dischert is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor with nearly two decades of experience supporting individuals and couples through some of life’s most difficult transitions. Whether navigating trauma, grief, identity shifts, or relationship struggles, Cardelia brings a deeply grounding and compassionate presence to her work.

Her integrative approach blends evidence-based practices like CBT, DBT, and trauma-focused therapy with a strong commitment to culturally responsive and affirming care. Cardelia specializes in working with clients managing complex trauma, intimate partner violence, chronic stress, and postpartum challenges, as well as those navigating identity, sexuality, and relational dynamics in non-traditional or marginalized contexts.

With extensive background supporting first responders, veterans, and military families, Cardelia also brings a justice- and systems-informed lens to her work. She has completed her Firefighter Behavioral Health certification and is currently pursuing a PhD in Somatic Sex Therapy, deepening her work at the intersection of sexuality, trauma, and healing.

Cardelia sees therapy as a collaborative process and strives to meet each client exactly where they are, offering care that is practical, affirming, and attuned to your unique story.

She offers virtual therapy across Florida and welcomes adults of all backgrounds, including LGBTQIA+ individuals, BIPOC clients, caregivers, and couples in diverse relational structures.

https://dreavita.com/cardelia-dischert-lmhc
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