Middle Fingers Up

EP.155 - Kam Bassier - "It Is A Priveledge To Be A Cycle Breaker"

Kiran Randhawa Season 1 Episode 155

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0:00 | 1:28:37

The one where we stop pretending everything’s fine just to keep the peace.

In this episode, I sit down with Kam Bassier  (from Episode 136: “You’re Not Lazy, You’re Burnt Out”) to talk about a tension so many BIPOC adults are carrying right now:

Why are we — the kids of immigrant parents, BIPOC millennials and Gen Z — having conversations our families never could?
Why does naming pain feel like betrayal?
And what does breaking cycles actually look like in real life?

We talk about harmony culture in collectivist and immigrant families — where keeping the peace wasn’t about comfort, it was about survival and appearances.  But when harmony is prioritized over accountability, the emotional weight doesn’t disappear. It gets stored in our bodies and shows up later as burnout, people-pleasing, numbing, substance use, overworking, resentment, and silence in our marriages and parenting.

This conversation isn’t about tearing our parents down.
It’s about understanding what they couldn’t take responsibility for — so we don’t keep carrying it, and so we don’t pass it on to our kids.

What we get into:

Gratitude and grief can coexist — you can honor the sacrifices and name the emotional gaps

Why “they did their best” often shuts down real healing

How choosing peace over accountability trains us to minimize ourselves

Why inner-child work isn’t cute — it’s necessary

Rest, boundaries, and feeling all emotions (not just “happy”) as acts of resistance

A raw moment about quitting weed — not because it’s bad, but because numbing became easier than feeling

Not everyone in your family will be ready for this work — and that’s okay. You don’t need permission to heal. The work may feel lonely, but it’s how cycles end and new ones begin.

One thing to take away:
You can love your family deeply and still choose healing over fake harmony.
The next generation is watching what we do with what we were handed.




Instagram:  kambassier



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In the spirit of reconciliation, we acknowledge that we live, work and play on the traditional territories of the Blackfoot Confederacy (Siksika, Kainai, Piikani), the Tsuut’ina, the Îyâxe Nakoda Nations, the Métis Nation (Region 3), and all people who make their homes in the Treaty 7 region of Southern Alberta.