By Gilan Merwanji, LCSW | GK Preserve Group
As a South Asian therapist, I bring a deep awareness of how culture, identity, and systems shape our mental health. I understand what it means to navigate multiple worlds — family expectations, cultural values, internal pressures — all while trying to stay grounded and well. But while my background informs my work, my practice is not just for South Asian clients.
At GK Preserve Group, I welcome people from all backgrounds — across race, culture, gender, sexuality, and lived experience. Whether you’re navigating the world as a person of color, a woman, part of the LGBTQ+ community, a first-gen professional, or someone still figuring it out — you’re welcome here.
Culture and Mental Health
Culture shapes how we move through the world — how we cope, how we express (or hold back) emotions, and what we’re taught to see as normal, acceptable, or strong. That’s true for all of us, no matter our background.
In therapy, cultural awareness isn’t about making assumptions. It’s about slowing down, listening closely, and staying curious about your experience. I don’t expect your story to match mine. I meet you where you are, with respect and openness.
Whether we’re working through trauma, anxiety, burnout, or identity-related challenges, we’ll do the work together. And we’ll do it in a way that reflects you — your pace, your values, and your voice.
A Safe Space for Complexity
Many of my clients are navigating layered identities — first-gen professionals balancing cultural loyalty with personal growth, LGBTQ+ individuals managing both visibility and safety, or high-achieving adults who look “fine” on the outside but feel stuck inside. Therapy should be a space where all of that is welcome.
I use trauma-informed, evidence-based approaches like EMDR and TEAM-CBT, while also making space for humor, compassion, and real-life messiness. You won’t be expected to perform or explain everything perfectly. You just have to show up — as you are. We’ll begin there.