culture

Why Are They Like That?

This post was originally written for Anise Health. Original blog can be viewed here.


As we continue on our healing journeys and begin to understand more about ourselves, there is a reckoning that happens. The more we learn about our mental health, the better we are able to trace who we are today to our experiences in the past. Oftentimes, we connect the dots back to our parents’/caregivers' actions. This can initially lead us into painful spaces of anger and grief that are challenging yet necessary to face.


With many clients, there eventually comes a fork in the road. As they begin to see themselves and their relationships in a new light, they need to decide whether or not to maintain these connections. For those of us coming from collectivist cultures, it can be unthinkable to cut off our families. Sometimes there are other reasons for why we need to stay in a relationship, such as physical safety, housing, or other types of financial support. So how do you maintain a relationship with people who have hurt you?


One route that can be helpful is starting to see your family as whole people, rather than just who they are in relation to you. This type of exploration can help us answer the question, “Why are they like that?” While it certainly doesn’t excuse their behavior, it can help us begin to understand. Sometimes, it can even help us take a step back from our own suffering. When we see others as whole people, we begin to see that their actions stem from their own experiences and issues. Their mistreatment of us is not because we are bad, we are not good enough, or we deserve it. In fact, we begin to see that what happened to us when we were young was actually not our fault at all. 


In my experience, there are three common reasons why our immigrant parents were often unable to give us what we needed.

  1. They have suffered their own traumas. 

    These come in many different shapes and forms. Sometimes it is deeply personal, perhaps from their own parents. Other times the trauma may be on a broader scale, such as living in poverty or surviving a war. Their immigration histories are a great place to look for clues - What were they escaping from? Who and what did they leave behind? How did they get to their new homes? We know today that trauma significantly impacts our emotional development, core beliefs, and ways of interacting with others. 

  2. There are significant cultural differences. 

    Mental health as we think of it in the Western world is composed of very new ideas. Older generations often have a much different understanding and experience of emotions. This is just as true in other cultures. In Mandarin, the language literally lacks words for many emotions that we can name in English. Japanese culture tends to view emotions less as things that belong to somebody and more as existing between people. Different cultural values may also mean that it is much less important to be able to identify how one feels, and much more important to understand how something impacts the group as a whole.* 

  3. They never learned how. 

    This can be true when there are traumas and cultural differences, and it can also be true without those things. If our parents did not have good modeling for the type of emotional parenting that we needed, it is much less likely that they would be able to figure it out on their own. Even if they were able to recognize that they were falling short, it is hard to overcome old patterns and try something new.

While many things are not our fault, as we grow up, it becomes our responsibility. It’s a challenging balance to acknowledge the factors that impacted us without falling into the victimhood of blaming. If you aren’t ready, that’s okay. If you never want to go down this path, that’s an equally valid choice too. Grief and anger and hurt deserve their due space. 


However, if you find yourself at this fork in the road, more understanding can lead to more acceptance. Acceptance doesn’t mean we approve of how people treat us. It surely does not mean we need to keep ourselves in a position where we keep getting hurt. Seeing things more clearly helps us come to terms with if and how we can move forward with these people in our lives.



*If you’re curious about how cultures experience emotions differently, check out this podcast or this book.


Anise Health is the first culturally-responsive digital mental health platform offering therapy, coaching, and digital self-service tools that are tailored for the unique needs of communities of color. Anise interventions move away from diagnosis-driven, Eurocentric models and towards incorporating culture and intersectionality into evidence-based treatments, which research shows to be 5x more effective.

Anise is available in California and we are currently accepting Asian-identifying adults (ages 18+) and partners/family members as new clients (more launches coming soon). If you’re ready to see how Anise can support you, fill out the brief Client Intake Form. You’ll be matched to culturally-responsive clinicians within 2 business days, and you will get a free 15 minute trial consultation to ask questions and see if it would be a good fit. Take action today to start taking care of you!

Caught In Between

This post was originally written for Anise Health. Original blog can be viewed here.

When you grow up Asian-American, you get a lot of mixed messages. Kids learn to code-switch early as a matter of survival. This comes instinctively and we quickly learn what is okay at home that is not okay at school and so on. 


Whether we know it or not, the communities that we belong to teach us what is important, how to behave, and how the world around us works. Even if your family has already been in the US for generations, the way you were raised is still impacted by your culture of origin, your family’s immigration history, and the historical contexts which shaped your family’s story. 


Code-switching isn’t inherently bad. In fact, it is a necessary skill as we mature and begin participating in a world that is full of diverse places and faces. Learning discernment and becoming adaptable helps us thrive.


However, this bicultural tension can also lead to internal conflicts and confusion. Especially in Asian cultures where the emphasis is on following authority, a lot of us haven’t been encouraged to think critically for ourselves. We aren’t sure how to answer the questions of who we want to be and what kind of life we want to live. It’s easy to get lost in all the messaging and become reliant on others to tell us what to do. The problem is, following every single direction is impossible.


A lot of Asian-Americans feel caught in-between: not American enough to be accepted out in the world and not Asian enough to be accepted at home. You wake up and go to work feeling unseen and dissatisfied, having hit the bamboo ceiling. When you are out and about you stay on guard for microaggressions and, in recent years, physical attacks. When a social interaction feels off, you wonder, “Are they treating me like this because I look different?” Then you go home or try to be with your family. When you speak to your parents, you stumble over your mother tongue which makes communication difficult. On top of that, you’re reminded of their un-American expectations for you, your career, and your life. This kind of life is exhausting.


If you can relate to anything in today’s post, I would like to encourage you to offer yourself some grace and compassion. Know that you’re not alone in the burdens you carry. When you’re caught in-between, it can feel like there isn’t any place where you can relax, be yourself, and have that be enough. It becomes vitally important for us to find places, relationships, and communities to take refuge in. Finding a culturally-responsive therapist is one place to start, but we can also draw strength from friends, being in nature, spiritual communities, or any number of other sources. Everybody deserves to remember that they are enough, just as they are.


Learn more about acculturative stress here.


Anise Health is the first culturally-responsive digital mental health platform offering therapy, coaching, and digital self-service tools that are tailored for the unique needs of communities of color. Anise interventions move away from diagnosis-driven, Eurocentric models and towards incorporating culture and intersectionality into evidence-based treatments, which research shows to be 5x more effective.

Anise is available in California and we are currently accepting Asian-identifying adults (ages 18+) and partners/family members as new clients (more launches coming soon). If you’re ready to see how Anise can support you, fill out the brief Client Intake Form. You’ll be matched to culturally-responsive clinicians within 2 business days, and you will get a free 15 minute trial consultation to ask questions and see if it would be a good fit. Take action today to start taking care of you!