Should your therapist have an interest in politics?

The question of whether therapists should engage with politics has grown more urgent in recent years. The world outside the consulting room has become louder, more divisive, and increasingly polarised. The rise of misinformation, the mainstreaming of extremist ideologies, and the deepening fractures in civic discourse have all conspired to push the boundaries of what we consider “political.” Inevitable, this environment seeps into the therapy room and into the words and silences of patients and the quiet reflections of therapists. To some, staying politically neutral in such a climate feels almost complicit. To others, stepping into political territory risks alienating the sacred space of therapy from its true purpose: to focus on the psyche, not the state.

Therapy is, by its nature, an intimate and private encounter. It is one of the last refuges from the noise of the world. People come to therapy not to hear their therapist’s worldview but to understand their own. The patient’s pain, conflict, or confusion must take center stage. Even the most well-meaning political commentary from a therapist risks turning therapy into something didactic or morale. It may subtly push a patient toward compliance with the therapist’s values, rather than helping them excavate and inhabit their own. For some practitioners, this traditional boundary is sacrosanct: it ensures that the work remains rooted in the patient’s inner life, not in the fleeting urgencies of external events.

But to believe that politics can ever be fully excluded from therapy is, perhaps, naive. Politics is not confined to governments or elections; it is woven into the fabric of everyday life. A patient’s anxiety about their future may be entangled with economic insecurity. Their feelings about intimacy and identity may reflect the influence of systemic oppression. In such cases, to ignore the political dimensions of their experience risks misunderstanding the forces that shape their suffering. The therapeutic process may feel incomplete, even hollow, if it fails to acknowledge the patient’s lived reality in its entirety.

Yet, for therapists to directly engage with politics raises thorny questions. Whose politics? In a world where truths are contested and misinformation proliferates, what authority does a therapist have to declare what is real or right? The therapist’s role is not to guide a patient toward a particular ideology but to foster their capacity for self-awareness and independent thought. To impose a political narrative risks replicating the very dynamics of control and disempowerment that therapy seeks to undo.

The Pelicot Rape Trial: A Testament to Bravery in the Face of a Culture of Concealment

At the heart of the Pelicot rape trial is not just a story of injustice, but one of extraordinary courage. The woman at the center of this case—unshaken by the weight of public scrutiny—made a choice that few could endure: she allowed the hearing to be public. In doing so, she shattered the veil of silence that has long protected men accused of such crimes, refusing to let them operate in the shadows of a society that often shields them.

This was an act of defiance and clarity. In many cases of sexual violence, the burden falls overwhelmingly on the victim to protect their privacy, even at the cost of justice. But by stepping into the light, this woman redefined the narrative. She refused to allow her experience to be reduced to whispers behind closed doors or brushed aside by a culture too comfortable with secrecy. Her decision ensured that the men involved were seen for who they are—neither hidden by anonymity nor shielded by institutional protections.

Bravery as a Catalyst for Accountability

Her bravery serves as a reminder that the public exposure of such cases is not an act of spectacle but a necessary tool for accountability. It forced society to confront the humanity of the victim and the stark reality of the system that often minimizes or erases their suffering. By making the trial public, she dismantled the power of invisibility that enables so many perpetrators to evade accountability.

This act of courage extends beyond her own case; it sets a precedent. It reminds us that silence is complicity, and that to speak out—even when it feels like the whole world is against you—is to resist not just individual wrongs but the entire culture of misogyny that enables them.

Exposing the Culture of Concealment

The decision to make the trial public also forces us to confront the dynamics of power and secrecy that allow systemic injustices to thrive. Historically, the stories of survivors have been buried—hidden by institutions, dismissed by communities, or drowned out by narratives of male innocence. When hearings are closed, or when victims are silenced by the weight of shame or societal pressure, perpetrators are shielded from accountability.

But this trial has torn that shield away. It has exposed not just the actions of the men involved but also the societal structures that protect them. The public nature of the hearing means that the world is watching, and with that comes a demand for transparency and justice that cannot be ignored.

A Symbol of Resistance

Her decision is not just an act of personal bravery; it is an act of resistance against the forces of silence that uphold patriarchy. It is a declaration that the truth will not be hidden, no matter how uncomfortable or inconvenient it might be for those in power.

By making her story public, she has given voice to countless women who have been silenced and reminded the world that the fight for justice is not just a private battle—it is a collective one. Her courage inspires us to confront the uncomfortable truths that allow misogyny to persist, and it challenges us to create a culture where survivors are not shamed for their bravery but celebrated for it.

Her story reminds us that change does not come from hiding in the shadows. It comes from stepping into the light, even when it burns. And in doing so, she has become a beacon for those who refuse to be silenced.