Mental health conversations have grown louder in recent years, and within Black communities, that shift carries particular weight. As Black Mental Health Awareness Month draws attention to these issues, licensed clinical psychologist and executive coach Dr. Loren Hill is using the moment to clarify something many people misunderstand entirely, the actual difference between therapy and coaching, and why both deserve a place in how people care for themselves.
Two different tools, not competing ones
Therapy and coaching often get treated as interchangeable, but Hill draws a clear line between them. Therapy focuses on healing, giving people a structured space to process past trauma, grief and emotional pain. Coaching looks forward instead, helping clients set goals and build the momentum needed to reach them. The two are not substitutes for each other. Someone might work through grief in therapy while simultaneously using a coach to navigate a career transition, addressing the past and building toward the future at the same time.
Why support carries stigma in the Black community
Hill points to a specific barrier that shapes how many Black individuals approach mental health support, a long history of mistrust rooted in real harm, including documented patterns of misdiagnosis and unethical treatment within the mental health system. That history has left many people wary of seeking help at all, often framing self reliance as strength and support as an admission of failure. Hill pushes back directly on that framing, arguing that carrying every burden alone is not a badge of honor but a limitation shaped by outside expectations rather than genuine necessity.
The case for coaching as legitimate support
Skepticism toward coaching specifically often stems from viewing it as motivational fluff rather than substantive help. Hill counters that characterization with research, pointing to a 2023 review of 39 randomized controlled trials that found coaching produces measurable improvements in performance, confidence and overall well being. That evidence base positions coaching alongside therapy as a credible, structured form of support rather than a lesser alternative.
When the two need to work together
Hill illustrates the relationship between coaching and therapy through a client who initially came to her citing burnout and a desire for career coaching. As their conversations continued, it became clear the client was actually navigating deep grief alongside significant family responsibilities, issues better suited to therapeutic support than forward focused coaching. Hill referred the client to therapy first, with coaching set aside until the underlying emotional weight had been addressed. The sequencing mattered. Attempting to build toward future goals while unprocessed grief remains unresolved rarely produces lasting results, and recognizing that distinction is part of what makes layered support effective.
Reframing support as strategy, not surrender
Central to Hill’s message is a shift in how people think about seeking help in the first place. Rather than treating support as a last resort reserved for crisis moments, she encourages viewing it as an ongoing strategy, one that high functioning, capable people use precisely because they are invested in their own growth. That reframing matters most in communities where asking for help has historically carried social risk, turning what feels like vulnerability into a form of deliberate self investment instead.
A conversation still unfolding
Hill’s insights are part of a four part series exploring mental wellness within professional and personal contexts, with future installments examining workplace pressures and the kinds of support systems that help people manage them. The distinction between coaching and therapy offers a starting point for a broader conversation, one aimed at helping people identify which kind of support actually fits what they are carrying, rather than defaulting to silence because the right option was never made clear.

