Alumni Spotlight: Q&A with Linda Crossley
Alumni Spotlight:
Q&A with Linda Crossley
California School of Professional Psychology at ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø
MA in Marriage and Family Therapy, Irvine Campus
Professional Information
Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist at Sanctuary for Compassion and Connection, Costa Mesa, CA
Q: How did your Alliant experience prepare you for your career path?
AIU provided a rigorous program that validated my passion to support people on their journeys back to wholeness, as well as stretched my personally. Â It also created an atmosphere where I could connect and collaborate with my peers, providing a built-in resource after graduation for consultations, referrals, and general support. Â It is mission critical that individuals stepping into such healing arts positions do their own work of healing, which starts with awareness and moves you to a greater understanding. Â Without doing your own work, burnout will be inevitable. Â Alliant did a fantastic job of ensuring this inner work was weaved into the academic program, including reinforcing the need for self-care as an integral part of maintaining mental health ourselves.
Q: What do you enjoy most about your work?
What I enjoy most is sensing when my clients are doing the hard work and feeling the results. Â It takes great courage to make your way into a therapist’s office and great strength to continue to return to it and to make a change in your life. Â This courage and strength are a constant reminder to me that human suffering is optional and how resilient the human spirit really is. Â By simply being a compassionate witness and remaining fully present with clients, I continue to experience awe-inspiring growth and transformation in my clients.
Q: What inspires you to make a positive difference in the world?
What inspires me is knowing that there is post-traumatic growth as I experienced it myself. Â We live in a traumatizing world and being a part of creating sacred space, even in a small way, one person, couple or family at a time, for healing is an absolute honor and privilege. Â I truly believe that if just one person makes a change, it creates a ripple in the pond that touches an unknown number of others, perhaps inspiring them to embark on their own healing journey.
Q: Any advice you have for current students.
Do your own healing work first! Â And, along that journey, embrace your worthiness of care too. Â If you carry a belief that you must work hard to prove your value in order to receive love and care, or that self-care is selfish, then there is work to be done. Â If this work is not done and you don’t take good care of yourself, the longevity of your career will be in jeopardy. Â When the balance between care giving and care taking is lopsided, you will quickly start to feel powerful emotions that overwhelm you. Â Work to build your own resilience muscles through such self-care practices, including healthy connections, self-compassion, and gratitude.
If you would like to share your reflections in an Alliant alumni spotlight, please  or email alumni@alliant.edu.