Even if you've never considered moving your therapy practice online, your perspective might currently be shifting. With these Corona-plagued sci-fi times, an ever increasing part of the world has to practice social distancing, and so it might soon be the case that for you, as a therapist, to be able to continue offering counselling there isn't any other way than to do therapy online.
Throughout my time as a therapist, I've had one main objection against therapy. It's an objection that can best be understood – and potentially solved – through the lens of friendship and witnessing.
No one expected that these two therapists, with completely different approaches to counselling, would share the goal of making life less complicated for therapists and clients alike. Here's the story of how a coffee at a Berlin café led to one therapy project after another.
2019 was an important year for the Berlin-based therapy platform It's Complicated. The directory went live and grew into a lively therapy community. Now it looks like 2020 will be a year of many more healing conversations, helpful features, and supportive content.
Working as a counsellor in a private practice has both rewards and hurtles. Here are the main things to keep in mind when going the "private practice" way.
From Copenhagen’s integrative mindset to Berlin’s binary of depth versus behavioral therapy, this candid post explores the often unspoken rivalries between therapy schools.