Find your psychologist online or in your city

Joseph

Individual therapy - PEN 250

14 years of experience: Relationship difficulties

ONLINE counseling only


Adriana

Individual therapy - PEN 200
Couple therapy - PEN 270

8 years of experience: Emotional breakdowns, Child psychology, Obsessive thoughts

ONLINE counseling only


Joanne

Individual therapy - PEN 150

12 years of experience: Relationship difficulties, Child psychology, Adolescent psychology, Low self-esteem

ONLINE counseling only


A psychologist works with healthy people.

They do not diagnose or prescribe medication, they are attentive to your feelings and experiences, provide support and help to improve the quality of your life.

A psychologist can assist you with the following requests:

DIFFICULT PERIODS IN LIFE

You are going through a personal crisis, divorce, job loss, relocation, suffering from loneliness.

MISUNDERSTANDINGS AND CONFLICTS

You find it difficult to communicate with your partner, relatives, children, in society.

GRIEF, LOSS, DEPRESSION

You have lost a relative, a friend, you cannot cope with a depressed state.

INTENSE EMOTIONS

You are struggling to cope with anger, fears, despair, longing, envy, resentment.

DECISION MAKING

You find it hard to make a choice, understand exactly what you would like in life and why.

RELATIONSHIP WITH YOURSELF

You are dissatisfied with your personality, appearance, actions, you can't accept yourself.

In the course of therapy, you:

  • Will learn to protect your boundaries and take care of yourself.
  • Restore body sensitivity.
  • Learn to slow down, recognize your emotions, and deal with them in an eco-friendly way.
  • Receive support in personal and professional life.
  • Learn to understand and manage your needs.
  • Discover your resources and points of support.
  • Learn to cope with personal difficulties.
  • Work through psychological traumas.
  • Learn to build healthy relationships with people.

Our mission

is a mentally healthy and happy society. We believe, and the experience of millions of people shows, that long-term therapy is an effective tool for personal transformation. After all, just like the body, our soul needs care and attention.

Answers to Your Questions

The word "psychotherapy" comes from two Greek words: soul (psyche) and healing (therapeia). And the psychotherapeutic process is, first of all, a process of transformation, changes. A person comes to therapy when they feel that something is wrong in their life or in their soul, and they need to change. Nowadays, more and more people are beginning to understand that psychologists and psychotherapists are as necessary for us as dentists, surgeons, or therapists - these doctors treat our bodies, while psychotherapists heal our souls. After all, internal comfort is as important as a healthy body, and sometimes (as proven by many studies) - the state of our mental processes greatly affects the somatic component of health. More than 2000 years ago, Socrates said: "Just as one cannot treat the eye without treating the head, and the head without treating the body, so one cannot treat the body without treating the soul." One should turn to psychotherapists not only when there are obvious problems, such as depression, phobia, severe loss, diseases, but also when we want to make our life simpler, brighter, more harmonious and calmer, to improve relationships that are important to us.

Ideally, relatively healthy people should also consult therapists. What is psychotherapy? It's a painstaking path of self-discovery, realizing one's reality, expanding one's view of one's abilities and boundaries. And who is a psychologist? They are a kind of guide who accompanies us throughout the entire journey, supports us, helps us understand how to live comfortably with ourselves. Why do we need a guide? To look at our life and decisions from a different angle. A psychologist acts as a mirror reflecting our reality, helping to recognize our habitual ways of interacting with ourselves and the environment. Sometimes these ways are effective, and sometimes they limit us, and the task of the psychotherapist is to help find new ways that make us more alive.

Do you feel there is disharmony in your life? Do you feel that something is preventing you from fully expressing yourself? Something weighing you down? There are many reasons to see a psychologist. These can include feelings of guilt, self-doubt, deep resentment, anxiety, jealousy, apathy, pessimism. Psychologists can also help those who lie too much, constantly expect something bad, cannot trust others, painfully compare themselves to others, love to manipulate people, overeat due to stress. Other reasons can be fanaticism, infantilism, self-flagellation, fixation, loneliness, fears, and so on. Asthma, allergies, vegetative-vascular dystonia... If you are worried about diseases, but doctors don't detect any pathology during examination and recommend seeing a psychologist, then consider it. Ask yourself! Are you happy? Are you completely satisfied with your life? Would you like to change something? Just don't lie to yourself. It's pointless. You can't fool your inner voice. If you truly feel inner harmony, then you don't need a psychologist. But if there is something weighing you down like a heavy stone, hindering your forward movement, or making you stagnate, then psychotherapy is a lifesaver for you.

No, they won't be able to wave a magic wand and solve all your problems. But they can help alleviate the burden of your problems, ease emotional pain, and assist in understanding the causes of your difficulties. With their guidance, you'll learn to address these issues, experiencing a different kind of interaction. After interacting with a professional, you'll feel more confident moving forward in life, knowing that you're capable of much more. You'll stop being afraid. You'll find it easier to interact with others. You'll be able to build healthy relationships. You'll learn to face your fears head-on and to live through them in the company of another person.

It happens that a person turns to a psychotherapist hoping that a couple of sessions will help him solve all his difficulties. But this does not happen, during this time you can get temporary relief, reaction of complex feelings and emotions, but deep work takes much longer. Sometimes months and years are needed to understand the true reasons that prevent us from feeling 100% happy. Short-term therapy is a minimum of 10 sessions with a psychologist. Long-term therapy from 30 sessions, depending on the request, the speed of the client's progress, the peculiarities of his character, and the level of personality organization.

The main difference between a psychotherapist, a psychologist, a psychiatrist, and a coach lies in their training, methods used, and the issues they deal with.A psychologist is a professional who studies the mind and behavior. Psychologists have at least a master's degree in psychology, and many have a doctorate. They can perform a wide range of tasks, including conducting psychological research, performing psychological testing, and providing psychotherapy. A psychotherapist is a type of psychologist who specializes in helping people deal with their mental health issues. They may use various types of therapy to help their clients change behaviors, overcome problems, and improve their lives. Psychotherapists may also have specialized training in a specific type of therapy. A psychiatrist is a medical doctor who specializes in mental health, including substance use disorders. Psychiatrists are qualified to assess both the mental and physical aspects of psychological problems, and they can prescribe medication. A coach primarily focuses on helping clients set and achieve goals, overcome obstacles, and make changes or shifts in their lives. They do not diagnose or treat mental health disorders and typically work with individuals who are functioning well but need help in specific areas of their lives. Coaching is more future-focused and goal-oriented. Each of these professionals can play an important role in mental health care, but the best choice depends on the individual's needs.

If intensive work is required, then meetings occur up to twice a week. More often, it's one meeting per week. Also, everything depends on the method in which the psychotherapist works and their approach.

A psychotherapist must definitely have a higher medical or psychological education. They must have undergone training as a psychotherapist, at least within one of the directions, for example - Gestalt therapy, psychoanalysis, cognitive-behavioral therapy, etc. They should have received more than 100 hours of personal psychotherapy (this means that they have worked out their problems and will not bring them into therapy with the client). They should be under the supervision of a more experienced psychotherapist, consulting with them in difficult moments, while maintaining confidentiality. All psychotherapists on qui.help necessarily meet all these criteria and make it into our database only on the recommendation of another psychotherapist. During the first sessions with a psychotherapist, you will definitely form some impression of them. And if you feel uncomfortable working, firstly, you need to discuss this with the psychotherapist themselves, as your impression may be a projection from life that you have imposed on the psychotherapist. This is also part of the psychotherapy process. However, if discomfort does not go away after discussing unpleasant feelings with the therapist themselves, then it is worth thinking about changing the specialist. The psychotherapist that suits you will, firstly, listen to you without interrupting. The second point - they will be genuinely interested in your story. And you should get a feeling that you trust this person, that you are ready to tell them the truth, without trying to look better than you really are. You should feel comfortable.

Becoming a psychotherapist requires a lot of material, mental, and physical effort. Long-term education, personal psychotherapy, supervision, and constant professional development require serious financial investment. Therefore, a psychotherapist sets the cost of their session, in part, based on the need to cover these expenses. Additionally, psychotherapists bear constant costs for renting premises and purchasing necessary materials for work. To a large extent, the price depends on the therapist's experience, the number of specializations and courses they have completed. Therefore, the cost for novice psychotherapists is slightly lower. The cost of a session also depends on the city where the psychotherapist practices. The larger the city, the higher the costs, and the higher the cost of a session with a psychotherapist. That's why some people prefer to work with a psychotherapist online.

One of the therapist's tasks is to create a space where the client will feel safe. Confidentiality is an important component of this. On reputable training programs, enough time is devoted to this issue. The mere fact of the client's meetings with the psychologist and, accordingly, everything that happens at these meetings should not leave the psychotherapist's office. The decision to keep the fact of working with a psychologist confidential or not remains with the client. For example, if you meet your psychotherapist in a public place in the presence of other acquaintances, they will pretend not to know you, unless you wish to disclose your acquaintance and the fact of personal therapy. In accordance with the ethical code of psychotherapy, everything that happens in a session with a client is strictly confidential! An exception, which is definitely agreed with the client, is when a psychotherapist can discuss a client's case with their supervisor, without mentioning names. This will help the psychotherapist work with you more effectively. In this case, the same rules of confidentiality apply to the supervisor. Exception: confidentiality is not maintained in cases of the client committing criminal offenses, threats to the life and health of the client or third parties. In these situations, the psychotherapist will be forced to turn to the appropriate authorities and report the danger.

In the literal sense of the word, supervision translates as "oversight." However, professionals today understand this term somewhat differently: supervision has now become synonymous with mentorship. Supervision is aptly called "therapy for therapy" as it forms the conceptual and value core of any professional psychotherapeutic training. Why is supervision necessary at all? When a future psychotherapist completes their education and undergoes mandatory therapeutic practice, it is necessary for someone to monitor that they do not harm themselves or their clients. By analyzing the therapist's individual working skills, style, methods of working with the client, the supervisor aims to resolve problems and difficulties that arise during a given session and, if necessary, directs the supervisee to individual therapy. The supervisor provides an expert evaluation of the therapist's work, offers their view of the situation, helps to find ways to assist the client with their request, and provides support to the therapist. Regular supervision not only enhances the skill of the psychotherapist but also serves as a prevention of professional burnout. In one way or another, supervision always goes hand in hand with therapy: today, they are rightly considered two sides of the same coin.

Let's answer right away, no. A psychotherapist will not give you advice and teach you how to live. Many people think that they should turn to a psychologist who was able to overcome a similar problem and will tell how to do it in your case. The task of the psychotherapist is to help you find your own way to solve problems. It's a different matter when a psychotherapist builds the positioning of his services around a spectrum of certain problems because these issues are personally familiar to him or are in the area of heightened professional interests and research. But this does not mean that other psychotherapists cannot effectively work with these problems.

Firstly, psychotherapists are just like other people, who experience challenging life stages and traumas. They also need help and support and they seek it from their own psychotherapists. Secondly, a psychotherapist's personal therapy is a mandatory component of professional training that includes, on one hand, training in conducting therapy and, on the other hand, client experience, which implies knowing the boundaries and resources of one's personality, working through behavioral patterns, forming receptivity to elements of the psychotherapeutic process, developing a deep understanding of psychotherapeutic practices, addressing personal issues, and working through personal limitations that affect successful independent psychotherapeutic activity. Since a psychotherapist's tool is their own personality, they need to constantly improve this tool and ensure that it is in working order. Therefore, qualified psychotherapists regularly receive personal therapy, which is also very important for preventing professional burnout.

That happens! And it's definitely worth discussing with your psychotherapist, which is also a part of the therapeutic process. If the discomfort continues, ask them to recommend another specialist to you. The psychotherapist with whom you have already worked will do this best.

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