From Compton to PhD: Breaking Generational Cycles with Dr. Xochilt Alamillo
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What does it actually look like to not become a statistic? Dr. Xochilt Alamillo — Chicana therapist, PhD, business coach, podcast host, and retreat creator — is the living proof. She grew up in Compton, moved to Colorado as a teenager and experienced full-on culture shock, fell into the wrong crowd, and ended up with a criminal record by 20. Fast forward through community college, side hustles, three kids, and a whole lot of tunnel vision: she became the Latina therapist she couldn't find when she needed one most. In this episode, Dr. Xochilt and Jannese get into ALL of it — bicultural stress, emotional neglect in Latino families, what healing actually looks like (spoiler: it's not the cute Instagram version), survivor guilt as a first-gen cycle breaker, and how she built multiple income streams as a therapist while everyone in her field was taking a so-called vow of poverty.
WE GET INTO:
00:00 – Welcome and Intro: Meet Dr. Xochilt Alamillo
02:02 – Growing Up in Compton: Not Knowing What You Don't Know
04:22 – Culture Shock, the Wrong Crowd, and a Criminal Record
08:25 – Becoming the Latina Therapist She Couldn't Find
10:24 – First-Gen Resilience and Why It Can Also Hurt You
11:00 – The Biggest Mental Health Struggles Latinas Carry in Silence
12:31 – When "Being Strong" Becomes Self-Abandonment
14:05 – Bicultural Stress: Not Latino Enough, Not American Enough
19:52 – Emotional Neglect: The Harm We Normalize in Latino Families
24:53 – What Healing Actually Looks Like (It's a Process, Not a Glow-Up)
29:04 – Survivor Guilt and the Weight of Being the Enlightened One
34:37 – Navigating Family Expectations vs. Your Ideal Life
36:45 – Why Finding Your People Is Non-Negotiable
37:45 – Debunking Therapy Stigma in the Latino Community
43:32 – Dr. Xochilt's Entrepreneurial Journey as a Therapist
47:46 – Hosting Latina-Only Healing Retreats (Including One in Oaxaca!)
51:22 – The First Step Out of Survival Mode
KEY TAKEWAYS:
- Being rejected by both your culture and mainstream America has serious mental health consequences, and you didn't make it up.
- Anxiety in Latinas isn't just personal worry. It's your whole family's future sitting on your chest, and the weight is not yours alone to carry.
- Emotional neglect is one of the most normalized (and damaging) patterns in Latino households. Naming it isn't talking trash on your cultura but the first step to changing it.
- Healing is not a cute Instagram journey. It hurts. But the goal isn't a pain-free life, it's being equipped to handle whatever comes your way.
- Survivor guilt is real when you're the first to "make it out." Surrounding yourself with people who get it is how you stay grounded.
- Therapy doesn't have to look like a couch and a notepad. It's a conversation with someone who has no skin in the game.
- When therapy isn't accessible, lean into what your cultura already does well: cafecito with amigas, curanderismo, time outside — do more of it with intention.
- Therapists: you do not have to take a vow of poverty. Retreats, groups, trainings, and coaching are all legitimate income streams.
- Finding your people — online or off — is one of the most radical acts of self-preservation a first-gen woman can make.
CONNECT WITH DR. XOCHILT
- Website
- Podcast: The Chicana Therapist Podcast (all major platforms)
TAKE THE NEXT STEP:
- Yo Quiero Dinero Private Membership
- Read my book, Financially Lit!
- Leave me a voicemail
This episode of Yo Quiero Dinero was produced by Heart Centered Podcasting.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.