This paper invites students into the rich and evolving field of Indigenous Psychologies, where ways of understanding mind, self, and healing are deeply grounded in cultural, spiritual, and relational worldviews. Developed by Indigenous peoples across the globe—often in response to the limitations and harms of dominant Western psychological models—these approaches offer powerful insights into wellbeing, identity, and resilience. Students will engage critically with both psychological and Indigenous knowledges, exploring how concepts like selfhood, psychological challenges, and healing are understood and practised in diverse Indigenous contexts. The course sheds light on the historical and material conditions that have shaped Indigenous lives, including the enduring impacts of colonisation, globalisation, and systemic exclusion, while also affirming the strength, creativity, and innovation embedded in Indigenous ways of being. Through topics such as cultural identity, Indigenous-led interventions, and the role of language, narrative, and land in sustaining wellness, students are encouraged to reflect deeply and ethically on the nature of psychology itself. This is a paper for Indigenous and non-Indigenous students alike—those who are ready to question, listen, unlearn, and imagine new pathways toward individual and collective flourishing