The War-Time Social Worker
Times of war, or extreme peril requires guidance and real leadership. We term these war time war presidents. These are presidents described as strong, persevering, and able to lead during times of extreme national distress or even division.
These presidents unify the populace around them. If you’ve never struggled with a major mental health disorder, or issue in your life, you might not liken disorder to war, but I do. Every day for me is a war against my illness, and I am in it to win it or else suffer the tragic unfortunate process of florid psychosis in full bloom (Addington et al., 2003).
As a practicing social worker (really, the reader need only think of a mental health clinician), it is my duty, my responsibility to teach the people I work with to carry on despite their plight. My clients suffer from a full range of mental health disorders, all complicating their lives to the point where the best route to health may be too obfuscated to identify at first glance.
This is where I come in, and this where I thrive. I am a war time social worker. Yes, this is a thing, if a president can lead the nation to peace and victory. I can lead my clients to health and wellness out of the annals of disaster, grief, or any of the endless symptoms people can become stricken with under the terror of mental illnesses (Pilao et al., 2017).
This is serious, this is also very important. War time social work is the micro level counterpart of the war time leaders in our nation’s long history of challenging wrongers throughout the world. Instead, I challenge my clients to confront their evils, inside and many times in their interpersonal landscapes when their social world gets out of hand. I am now challenging all social workers, psychologists, and clinicians in mental health to take on a new acronym and designation as a war time clinician.
Like the point person who owns their case (Guttman, 2019). The war time social worker is you’re go to clinician when the odds are pitted against the client to recover. There is a reason why you bring on the war time social worker into the clinical picture. Because; serious harm was done, endured, and must be righted if the client is to survive or return to their baseline.
The war time social worker has a job, a great task ahead. They are charged with not just a simple intervention (Griner & Smith, 2006). They are charged with major restorative clinical work and progress. If this is not experienced or produced, the client is surely in peril. War time social workers are as savvy in their skills as they are speedy in writing to produce brilliant outcomes.
Their skills outpace the constraints of most people’s movements and the speed of societal waves to interfere or complicate the lives of their clients. In fact, the war time social worker mobilises the community and its resources around and for their client. They stretch and use resources in a way that creates new opportunities for their clients.
I have been a war time social worker for my clients’ time and again. I have had to manipulate billing to justify needed services so my clients would be met with consistently and frequently when they needed it the most (Pinto-Coelho & Relojo, 2017).
I have gone to war for my clients to secure housing, bridge connections and natural supports, and create
safety plans that are so radical, they transcend the bounds of conventional status changes around the
protection of health. I’ve held meetings across multiple systems until the right person in the government
was reached that could bring about the needed oversight across systems to ensure my clients would not
fall through the cracks of treatment when they need it the most.
So, I ask you: what kind of therapist are you? Are you willing to escape the confinement of conventional clinical wisdom and depart from the textbook? Or are you going to sit idly by while your client falls apart, when the minimum work just doesn’t cut it?
I am encouraging you all, with every breath I can spare, to expel out of your lungs the disease of inactivity and traditionalist thinking when it comes to clinical practice. Understand the intersections that guide our lives and don’t let the lines get blurred when it comes to intervening in the most effective way possible, every time.
[…] Editor’s note: This article was published originally in Mental Health Affairs. […]