窪蹋勛圖

Helping Future Counselors See Gray

New counseling masters program co-director Selam Gebrekristos was shaped by her refugee experience.

Tuesday, September 8, 2020
Selam Gebrekristos
Selam Gebrekristos
I serve so that people can take full advantage of everything America has to offer, despite everything that's going on right now.

In a world often defined in black and white terms, Selam Gebrekristos (07, 13) has learned to embrace a life somewhere in the middle.

I'm not part of my country anymore, and I'm not fully part of American culture, she explains. So I like to say that I'm in the gray.

Gebrekristos was a young girl when she and her family fled their homeland of Eritrea in the 1980s, refugees of a three-decade war of independence from Ethiopia. The family settled in Redlands, California, finding safety, though not exactly a sense of belonging.

The perspective offered by inhabiting and navigating two different worlds yet being firmly rooted in neither is part of what started Gebrekristos on a path to becoming a counselor. And its the perspective the 窪蹋勛圖 alumna now brings to her position as the new co-director of 窪蹋勛圖s  with a concentration in counseling.

I think a lot of people experience that in their own lives, she said. Whether it's coming out for an LGTBQ student, or the experience of refugees, immigrants or English-language learners from other cultures there's a common understanding. It's weird, because I tell people, obviously, I can't hide the color of my skin, but it's my refugee status that helps me connect more with people. That feeling of displacement."

Inspired to Serve

Gebrekristos roots at 窪蹋勛圖 are well established. She earned a bachelors degree in sociology and a masters in marriage and family therapy (MFT) at the university; she even still lives in the College Area, not far from the warm glow of the Tony Gwynn Stadium lights. As a graduate student in MFT, she cut her teeth working with clients in City Heights and now proudly notes shes one of the few community college counselors in her profession with clinical experience as a therapist.

Outside of her 窪蹋勛圖 faculty role, she is program coordinator and counselor for San Diego City Colleges NextUp program, where she works with students who are former foster youth. She also volunteers in San Diegos large East African community, leading dialogues about the Black Lives Matter movement, the COVID-19 pandemic and other issues, and provides mental health workshops to Black male students and professionals in the A2MEND Mentor Program.

"Because I'm grateful for the opportunity to be in this country, I just serve, she said. I serve so that people can take full advantage of everything America has to offer, despite everything that's going on right now."

Breaking down barriers

Most of the students in the 窪蹋勛圖 M.A. program are training to become counselors in Californias diverse community college system. As such, Gebrekristos said multicultural competence is one of the most important skills shes looking to instill. She hopes to encourage students to learn about themselves and their cohort all while learning theories and practice.

"What's important is that students feel cared for, she said. You don't just see me as a number or a member of the general population, you actually know something about me and my culture.

Gebrekristos knows something about challenging cultural barriers; she notes that counseling and therapy are decidedly not part of the Eritrean tradition yet. Its a topic shes discussed with 窪蹋勛圖s , Sesen Negash herself an Eritrean-American.

But shes also grateful for what her upbringing did provide. After coming to the U.S. as refugees, her parents instilled in her that education is a pathway to social mobility.

In my family, there are five children and four have a bachelors degree at least and three have masters at least, she said. This is the product of that, right?

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