My therapeutic approach is grounded in a deep conviction in psychoanalysis, as developed in the tradition of Sigmund Freud and the rigorous re-reading by Jacques Lacan. With 18 years of clinical practice, my work is based on the principle that to truly address suffering, we must look beyond surface-level symptoms and diagnostic categories. While these can sometimes be useful for communication, they run the risk of obscuring the singular truth of each subject's experience.
While my dual background as a physician and psychologist provides a comprehensive understanding of human health, my method in the consulting room is distinctly psychoanalytic. This means we do not operate with pre-defined protocols or with the goal of a quick behavioral adjustment. Psychoanalysis is an invitation to a different kind of work: a courageous exploration of the unconscious. In psychoanalysis, the unconscious is not merely a repository for forgotten memories, but an active, dynamic force that manifests in our actions, dreams, slips of the tongue, and, crucially, in our symptoms.
The process unfolds through speech. The analytic setting is simple yet powerful: you are invited to speak as freely as possible—what is known as "free association"—about whatever comes to mind, without censorship or concern for coherence. On my part, I practice an "evenly suspended attention," a way of listening that does not cling to manifest meaning but is attuned to the repetitions, ruptures, and resonances in your discourse. It is in the very texture of your speech that we can glimpse the logic of your desire and the roots of your suffering.
In this space, the therapeutic relationship (the transference) becomes a vital field of work. This is not a relationship of friendship or advice, but a place where one's core relational patterns and fundamental fantasies can be re-enacted and, most importantly, analyzed. My role is not that of a master who holds the answers, but of a partner who sustains a space for your own truth to emerge.
The ultimate goal transcends the mere elimination of a symptom. A symptom is often an encoded message, a "compromise formation" that the subject has found to deal with an unbearable conflict. To work beyond it means to decipher this message and construct a more authentic and less costly way forward. It is a journey that aims to allow the subject to emerge from beneath the weight of repression and discontent. It is a path toward assuming your own desire and taking responsibility for it, achieving a lasting and meaningful freedom and change.