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MA Psychology Asian MFT Marriage Family Therapy Personal Statement

  • Writer: Robert Edinger
    Robert Edinger
  • Oct 10
  • 3 min read

I am convinced that I have important contributions to make to Marriage and Family Therapy and Counseling, especially with respect to Asians in America. Thus, I hope to be accepted to your particularly distinguished Master’s Degree Program in Psychology at ____ University so that I can become an expert in comparative approaches for better understandings Asian and Asian-American issues - Chinese in particular - sharing stories and strategies from different streams of immigrant communities, people originally from Hong Kong, Taiwan, mainland China, etc. I am uniquely suited for this task as a very dedicated student of Psychology and someone originally from Hong Kong who immigrated to America at the age of twelve.


Therapist in beige blazer holds a session with a family in cozy office, bookcase and plant visible. Text reads "ASIAN MFT PROFESSIONAL."
Asian MFT Contributing to Diversity and Cultural Competency

I am thankful that, once transplanted into the American experience, I found myself surrounded by many Taiwanese people in Rowland Heights, California. I learned Mandarin to compliment my native Cantonese from my many classmates, friends, a long-time boyfriend, etc. This helped me to develop something of a pan-Chinese identity which I am confident will help me to excel as an MFT professional with a focus on Chinese immigrant issues.


I look forward to becoming an MFT whom Asian immigrants can reach out to, in any of my three languages; we will use the one in which they feel most comfortable. In my capacity as a Marriage and Family Therapist with an interest in Asian and Asian-American issues generally speaking and Chinese issues in particular, I look forward to a lifetime of struggle against the tendency among Asians to refrain from seeking mental health counseling as a result of the stigma that is associated with mental health therapy and counseling in Asian societies, including those transplanted to America. Family problems are desperately real and families in crisis – stemming from divorce, death, illness, violence, etc. – need the support that I can provide, which will bring me the greatest joy possible and the highest sense of personal as well as professional fulfillment.


I want to become an expert on marriage in Asian and Asian American society, exploring the many complexities of therapy and how it can help not only those who struggle to save their marriage, but also those marriages that end in divorce – and the aftermath. I seek to excel at culturally sensitive Marriage and Family Therapy that is by and for Asians, especially Chinese clients, as I am convinced that the more culturally sensitive therapy is, the better it is, more directed, targeted, and subsequently successful.  I want to provide a space for reflection for those who need it and to serve as a guide and facilitator for self-discovery on individual levels while we work on challenges faced by relationships, most prominently marriage.


For several years now, I have deeply enjoyed my own process of self-reflection and growth, working through my own issues; and I now have a burning desire to help others.  Therefore, I seek full immersion experience and a solid grounding in psychoanalysis and cognitive and behavioral psychology as well as talk therapy, particularly theatrical orientations of Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy (IBCT). I look forward to using IBCT to treat addiction issues as well as other factors and stressors as I am especially excited about progress being made in this area. I also spend a lot of my free time reading about depression and ADHD.


I want to dedicate much of my professional life to the study of brain wave optimization as well as the use of natural remedies that can combat not just depression, but also other maladies. I want to help those who have been less fortunate in life, those who face special challenges, have fallen through the cracks, and are in greatest need of my support and guidance.


Finally, I want to thank you for considering my application to Psychology at ____ University.


MA Psychology Asian MFT Marriage Family Therapy Personal Statement

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Janice Yip
Nov 18
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

You highlight your Hong Kong background, multilingual skills (Cantonese, Mandarin, English), and immersion in diverse Chinese communities. This positions you uniquely to serve Asian immigrant families. You emphasize the stigma surrounding mental health in Asian societies and your desire to reduce it, which shows strong purpose and social responsibility. You articulate a clear vision—becoming an expert in culturally sensitive MFT, focusing on marriage, divorce, and family crises. You connect your own journey of self-reflection and healing to your desire to help others, which adds authenticity. Mentioning Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy (IBCT), psychoanalysis, cognitive-behavioral approaches, and interest in depression/ADHD demonstrates intellectual curiosity and awareness of therapeutic modalities. You emphasize helping marginalized individuals and those “fallen through the cracks,” which reflects compassion…

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