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Strength is part of the story, too.It would be easy to tell this story only through the lens of what is missing. But Williams' research is explicitly designed not to do that. Narrative inquiry centers on what people carry with them — and Haitian elders carry a great deal. Strong family networks. Faith communities that function as social anchors. Cultural traditions that honor age rather than dismiss it. A collective history of resistance and survival that stretches back to 1804, when Haiti became the world's first Black republic. These are not small things. They are the protective factors that research consistently finds matter most for emotional well-being in older age. The study seeks to understand how those strengths — faith, family, community, cultural identity — actually function in people's daily emotional lives. Not as categories on a checklist, but as living, breathing sources of meaning and resilience. Why it matters beyond South FloridaThe Haitian community in South Florida is the focus. But the questions this research asks matter far beyond a single zip code or population. How do we build mental health systems that actually serve people whose lives, languages, and cultural frameworks don't match the dominant assumptions those systems were built on? How do we train counselors and practitioners to show up with real cultural humility — not just awareness, but genuine responsiveness? And how do we make sure that older adults from immigrant communities are not invisible to the research that is supposed to inform their care?These are questions that the behavioral health field is still working to answer. Studies like this one are part of how that work gets done.