Across Boundaries Mental Health

Across Boundaries Mental Health We are leaders in providing equitable, holistic mental health and addiction services for racialized

Across Boundaries has been at the forefront of providing equitable, holistic mental health and addiction services for racialized and Black communities in the Greater Toronto Area.

When we talk about mental health, we often focus on the present. But history shapes health. For many First Nations, Inui...
06/11/2026

When we talk about mental health, we often focus on the present. But history shapes health.

For many First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities, the ongoing impacts of policies that disrupted access to land, language, culture, and family connections. Understanding this history helps us better understand why equitable, culturally grounded, and Indigenous-led approaches to care matter.

National Indigenous History Month is more than an opportunity to reflect on the past. It's an opportunity to recognize Indigenous resilience, leadership, knowledge, and the ongoing work of building healthier communities.

This month, take time to learn from Indigenous voices, stories, and perspectives. A deeper understanding of history can strengthen how we think about health, healing, and our shared responsibility to advance reconciliation.

Explore Indigenous-led learning resources:
https://www.canada.ca/national-indigenous-history-month

Racialized men deserve care without shame, judgment, or silence.In Canada, males account for nearly 75% of su***de death...
06/10/2026

Racialized men deserve care without shame, judgment, or silence.

In Canada, males account for nearly 75% of su***de deaths. This statistic is deeply concerning, but the conversation cannot stop at telling men to “open up.”

For many racialized men, mental health is shaped by racism, anti-Black racism, cultural stigma, financial stress, family expectations, pressure to “stay strong,” and barriers to culturally responsive care.

Support must also mean creating safer spaces where racialized men can be heard, understood, and cared for without having to explain or defend the realities they are carrying.

This Men’s Mental Health Month, we recognize the need for care rooted in dignity, trust, cultural understanding, and community.

If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, call or text 9-8-8 for free, confidential support, 24/7 in Canada.

Nearly one year after University Health Network (UHN) dismantled the Asian Initiative in Mental Health (AIM) program; co...
05/30/2026

Nearly one year after University Health Network (UHN) dismantled the Asian Initiative in Mental Health (AIM) program; community members, service users, advocates, and allies continue to raise concerns about the loss of culturally equitable mental health care.

Across Boundaries stands in solidarity with RE-AIM and all those calling for accountability, meaningful community engagement, and the restoration of services that reflect the needs, experiences, and lived realities of the communities they serve.

Culturally specific care is not an enhancement to the system. It is an essential part of equitable mental health support.

05/27/2026

Growth is not always loud. Sometimes, it looks like continuing to show up for yourself, even after difficult seasons.

When Sirene first shared her story, she spoke openly about navigating anxiety, depression, loneliness, and the realities of living with schizophrenia. Her story resonated with many because it reflected something deeply human: the courage it takes to keep moving forward.

Today, we’re resharing Sirene’s story as a reminder that healing is not linear, and growth can take many forms. Progress is not about never struggling again. It can look like building support, finding connection, learning what helps, and continuing to choose yourself, one step at a time.

Access to food can shape a person’s ability to care for themselves, remain connected to community, and navigate daily li...
05/20/2026

Access to food can shape a person’s ability to care for themselves, remain connected to community, and navigate daily life with greater stability and dignity.

For many individuals facing mental health challenges, poverty, isolation, mobility barriers, or systemic inequities, consistent access to meals is not separate from wellbeing. It is part of it.

Community-based support must recognize the realities people may be navigating beyond clinical care alone. That includes reducing barriers, meeting people where they are, and creating systems of support that are accessible, responsive, and rooted in care.

Food access is community care.

2SLGBTQ+ people deserve safety, affirmation, and community care, not survival through discrimination.For many racialized...
05/17/2026

2SLGBTQ+ people deserve safety, affirmation, and community care, not survival through discrimination.

For many racialized q***r and trans communities, experiences of harm are often compounded by intersecting forms of racism, homophobia, biphobia, transphobia, stigma, and systemic exclusion. These realities can impact mental health, wellbeing, safety, and access to support in deeply unequal ways.

On International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia, we recognize that creating safer communities requires more than awareness. It requires challenging the systems, narratives, and everyday harms that continue to marginalize people across multiple layers of identity.

We are sharing “The Power of Resiliency” by It Gets Better Canada, a resource exploring identity-based bullying, cyberbullying, microaggressions, and the importance of allyship, community support, and collective care.

Because everyone deserves to exist authentically, safely, and with dignity.

Explore the resource:
https://itgetsbettercanada.org/power-of-resiliency/

05/13/2026

Case management at Across Boundaries is grounded in the understanding that people are navigating more than a single issue.

Mental health and substance use are shaped by broader conditions, including housing instability, systemic racism, barriers to care, and involvement with the justice system. These realities are not separate from wellbeing. They are part of it.

This is why case management is not approached as a set of services, but as a relationship. It means working alongside individuals, taking the time to understand their experiences, and building care plans that reflect their goals, not assumptions.

Guided by anti-racism, anti-Black racism, trauma-informed care, and harm reduction, this work focuses on meeting people where they are. It also means supporting people in navigating systems that are often difficult to access, while creating pathways toward stability, connection, and self-advocacy.

Because meaningful support is not only about what is offered.
It is about how care is experienced.

Thank you to Sylvia Baffour, Case Manager at Across Boundaries, for sharing this perspective.

Learn more about case management services through the link in our bio.

Access to mental health care is often framed as availability. But for many communities, the real barriers are distance, ...
05/08/2026

Access to mental health care is often framed as availability. But for many communities, the real barriers are distance, language, stigma, and inconsistency in support.

Since January 2024, Across Boundaries has partnered with Delta Family Resource Centre to provide both in-person and virtual therapy within the community itself.

This approach matters.

By offering care in a familiar and trusted space, we are seeing stronger engagement and more consistent connections to support. The flexibility of a hybrid model also means fewer missed appointments and more continuity in care.

This is what community-based mental health support looks like when it is intentional, accessible, and rooted in real needs.

Most people who come to us have not just experienced trauma. They have experienced it inside systems that were never bui...
05/06/2026

Most people who come to us have not just experienced trauma. They have experienced it inside systems that were never built with them in mind.

Racism, anti-Black racism, colonialism, displacement, poverty — these shape how people experience harm and how safe they feel reaching out for help. A trauma-informed approach starts by acknowledging that reality before anything else.

It does not ask why someone is struggling. It asks what happened, and what they needed that they never received.

That question changes how care is delivered. It means safety and trust come before anything clinical. It means how someone shows up is understood as survival, not dysfunction.

People heal more readily when they feel safe enough to be honest. That is why our programs and services are built around this approach. To learn more on how you can access trauma informed support, visit: https://acrossboundaries.ca/services/

Every contribution helps make meaningful, lasting care possible.Your support helps grow and sustain community-based ment...
05/01/2026

Every contribution helps make meaningful, lasting care possible.

Your support helps grow and sustain community-based mental health and substance use services that are rooted in anti-racism, anti-Black racism, and anti-oppression principles. It makes it possible for our team to provide care that recognizes the full realities people are navigating, while advancing equity, healing, and systemic change.

This work extends beyond individual services. It means creating spaces where people are met with dignity, trust, and understanding. It means responding to the ways mental health is shaped by systemic barriers, social conditions, and lived experience. It means ensuring that care is relevant, accessible, and grounded in community.

It also means advocating for broader change, challenging the structures that create inequity and working toward systems that better serve Black, racialized, and marginalized communities.

Because real change happens when communities invest in care, in justice, and in one another.

To support this work, visit the link in our bio.

Address

51 Clarkson Avenue
Toronto, ON
M6E2T5

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+14167873007

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