My approach is grounded in existential and logotherapeutic principles, with a strong phenomenological orientation. I work with how a person experiences their world. Not only what they think or feel, but how their reality is structured, where it becomes rigid, and where possibilities narrow or disappear.
Rather than focusing on quick symptom relief, therapy is a process of clarifying one’s relationship to meaning, responsibility, and freedom. Difficulties such as anxiety, emptiness, or depression are approached as expressions of a disrupted relationship with oneself, others, and the world, not merely as problems to be eliminated.
In our work, we explore patterns, assumptions, and ways of being that may no longer serve you, and gradually open space for new possibilities. The aim is not to “fix” you, but to support a shift in how your life is lived and experienced, toward greater coherence, authenticity, and a more grounded sense of meaning.