October 19, 2017
WHITEHORSE—“If this is power, I don’t want anything to do with it.”
Growing up in a home where she experienced physical and emotional abuse, Magi Cooper sought to distance herself from what she saw as a destructive energy.
“I saw power as a dangerous thing,” said Cooper. “My father held all the power, and I felt like I had none.”
Early in her career as a counsellor and therapist, Cooper worked with women and children who had similarly experienced the misuse of power. She expanded her practice to include men after an important realization.
“I wanted to stop the intergenerational cycle of family abuse, and I realized that unless we begin to work with the people—mostly men—who are perpetuating this violence, we will not be able to facilitate change.”