Leading Through Tragedy: What Clinical Supervisors Owe Their Staff When the World Is Loud and Grieving

I hesitate to write in the immediate aftermath of death. Loss of life is not a teaching tool, and tragedy should never be mined for professional relevance. Yet within hours—sometimes minutes—it becomes clear that these events do not remain outside our work. They enter the therapy room, the supervision meeting, the staff break room. They show up in bodies, not theories.
In the same day, a clinician may sit with a client who feels protective of law enforcement and another whose trauma is rooted in encounters with it. Neither experience is wrong. Neither requires correction. Our work is not to adjudicate reality, but to help people make sense of their reality and move forward in alignment with their values and supports.
That task becomes exponentially harder when clinicians are carrying their own fear, grief, or activation. This is where supervision matters most—not as therapy, not as processing space, but as a place to restore the frame, reinforce boundaries, and help staff stay present without imposing their own unresolved reactions. Leading through moments like this is rarely loud or dramatic. It is quiet, deliberate, and deeply ethical.
Last night, a protester was shot and killed in Minneapolis by an officer with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Naming that plainly matters—not to litigate facts in an article like this, but to ground the reality we are all waking up into. Someone died. Families and communities are grieving. And for those of us supervising in mental health and substance use disorder treatment settings, the impact did not stay “out there.” It arrived at our front doors within hours.
I always hesitate to write in the immediate aftermath of death. Whether it’s an overdose, a suicide, or violence tied to public events, there is a thin and dangerous line between offering guidance and turning tragedy into an “educational moment.” Loss of life is not a case study. It is not content. And it deserves reverence.
At the same time, within 24 hours—often much less—it becomes unmistakably clear that our staff are already carrying the weight. Clients show up dysregulated. Trauma histories are activated. News footage loops relentlessly, replaying sounds and images that don’t politely wait for the nervous system to catch up. Supervisors feel the pull: Do I say something? Do I stay quiet? What if I make it worse?
This piece exists in that tension. Not to capitalize on a horrific event, but to name what many of you are already seeing and to offer grounded ways to lead through it.
The Reality on the Ground: Parallel Trauma Everywhere
In a single day, a clinician may sit with:
- A client who has a loved one in law enforcement, feeling fear, protectiveness, or anger at how the officer is being portrayed.
- Another client whose body remembers past harm involving law enforcement, immigration systems, or state power—and whose trauma response is loud, visceral, and non-negotiable.
- A third client whose substance use urges spike simply because their nervous system is overwhelmed and old coping strategies are calling their name.
None of these reactions are “wrong.” They are perceptions filtered through lived experience. And it is not our role—or our staff’s role—to correct those perceptions.
We spend years in post-graduate training learning how to help people make sense of their reality: how it intersects with their values, families, culture, and systems of support; how to move forward without erasing what they have lived through. Days like today stress-test that training.
They also create a parallel process. Staff are human. They are watching the same footage. They are carrying their own histories, beliefs, grief, fear, and anger. Pretending otherwise is not professionalism—it’s denial.
What Attending to Staff Actually Looks Like
Supervisors often think support requires long meetings, processing circles, or the perfect words. It doesn’t.
Sometimes the most important intervention is acknowledgment.
If you cannot meet individually or as a group, at minimum, send the email. Name that the coming days or weeks may be harder. Say out loud that increased anxiety, sleep disruption, irritability, grief reactions, trauma symptoms, or cravings (for those in recovery themselves) are not personal failures—they are predictable human responses to sustained exposure to distressing events.
That simple act does three things: it reduces shame, it signals safety, and it models reality-based leadership. Ignoring the moment does none of those.
Holding the Line: What Supervision Is—and Is Not
Clinical supervisors are not their staff’s therapists. Your role is not to process their trauma, analyze their reactions, or unpack their personal histories. Crossing that line helps no one and can blur boundaries fast.
Your role is to provide professional containment and skill-based support, especially when emotions are high.
That includes helping staff rationally detach during sessions when their own reactions are activated, reinforcing attending to the client’s emotions and perceptions (not imposing personal beliefs or political interpretations), supporting staff in noticing when their nervous system is leading the session and how to re-center, encouraging use of concrete tools (grounding, pacing, reflective listening, supervision consults, co-regulation skills), and reminding staff that EAPs, personal therapy, time off, and outside supports exist for a reason.
Leadership in These Moments Is Quiet—and It Matters
Leading through tragedy rarely looks heroic. It looks steady. It looks boring. It looks like boundaries, clarity, and compassion without spectacle.
Your staff do not need you to have the “right take” on what happened. They need you to protect the frame: the work, the clients, and their own sustainability in this field.
About the Author
Carmichael Finn, MA, LMFT, LADC, AADCR-MN is a clinical supervisor, educator, and behavioral health leader working at the intersection of mental health, substance use disorder treatment, and ethics. He serves as Executive Director of a comprehensive SUD treatment program in Minnesota and provides clinical supervision, leadership consultation, and ethics training to treatment providers across the state.
With years of experience supervising clinicians in high-acuity, trauma-exposed environments, Carmichael is particularly focused on helping supervisors lead with clarity during moments of crisis—supporting staff without blurring roles, maintaining ethical boundaries under pressure, and navigating the parallel process that emerges when clinicians and clients are simultaneously impacted by public tragedy.
In addition to his leadership work, Carmichael teaches courses in counseling and addiction studies, and regularly writes and presents on topics including moral injury, burnout, supervision in treatment settings, and ethical decision-making in complex systems. His work emphasizes steadiness over spectacle, and the responsibility supervisors carry to protect both staff and the clinical frame when the world becomes loud.