Gestalt Psychotherapist, MA, PGDip, UKCP Reg.
I offer a warm, relational, and collaborative space where we can explore whatever may be feeling difficult, stuck, overwhelming, or disconnected in your life.
My work is grounded in Gestalt psychotherapy, trauma-informed awareness, and curiosity about the ways our relationships, past experiences, and environments shape how we experience ourselves and others. Together, we work towards greater awareness, self-understanding, and meaningful change.
I have been interested in people and the human condition for as long as I can remember. I often found myself in situations where people would naturally open up to me about their experiences, struggles, and relationships, which made becoming a psychotherapist feel like a very natural path for me.
My curiosity about people and the ways we relate to ourselves, others, and the world around us led me to study psychology, social psychology, and eventually Gestalt psychotherapy. What drew me to Gestalt therapy was its focus on the whole person — not only symptoms or diagnoses, but also relationships, environment, past experiences, patterns of survival, and the wider context in which someone’s life unfolds.
I am particularly interested in how people adapt in order to survive, how disconnection develops, and how healing can happen through awareness, relationship, and deeper connection with oneself and others.
I also bring lived experience of adapting to different cultures and environments, and understand how challenging it can be to navigate belonging, identity, and connection whilst adjusting to new ways of living and relating. I know how easy it is to lose parts of yourself in the process of trying to fit in, and how important it can be to stay connected to who you are whilst also making space for difference and change.
My approach is rooted in relational depth, embodied presence, and trauma-informed awareness. I see therapy as a collaborative process where we slow down and pay attention not only to words, but also to what is happening underneath them — in the body, emotions, patterns, and silence.
Together, we explore the ways you may have learned to survive, protect yourself, or adapt to your environment, while gently creating space for the parts of you that may have felt unseen or pushed aside.
I work in a way that is compassionate, curious, and grounded in the therapeutic relationship itself. Rather than focusing only on symptoms, I am interested in your lived experience, your relationships, and the wider contexts that have shaped you.
I hold a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology, a Master’s degree in Social Psychology, and a Master’s degree in Psychotherapy.
My academic background has given me a strong foundation in understanding human development, neurodevelopment, relationships, identity, and the ways people adapt within family, cultural, and social systems. Alongside my psychotherapy training, this continues to inform the relational, trauma-aware, and culturally sensitive way I work with clients.
Gestalt Psychotherapist, MA, PGDip, UKCP Reg.
I offer a warm, relational, and collaborative space where we can explore whatever may be feeling difficult, stuck, overwhelming, or disconnected in your life.
My work is grounded in Gestalt psychotherapy, trauma-informed awareness, and curiosity about the ways our relationships, past experiences, and environments shape how we experience ourselves and others. Together, we work towards greater awareness, self-understanding, and meaningful change.
I have been interested in people and the human condition for as long as I can remember. I often found myself in situations where people would naturally open up to me about their experiences, struggles, and relationships, which made becoming a psychotherapist feel like a very natural path for me.
My curiosity about people and the ways we relate to ourselves, others, and the world around us led me to study psychology, social psychology, and eventually Gestalt psychotherapy. What drew me to Gestalt therapy was its focus on the whole person — not only symptoms or diagnoses, but also relationships, environment, past experiences, patterns of survival, and the wider context in which someone’s life unfolds.
I am particularly interested in how people adapt in order to survive, how disconnection develops, and how healing can happen through awareness, relationship, and deeper connection with oneself and others.
I also bring lived experience of adapting to different cultures and environments, and understand how challenging it can be to navigate belonging, identity, and connection whilst adjusting to new ways of living and relating. I know how easy it is to lose parts of yourself in the process of trying to fit in, and how important it can be to stay connected to who you are whilst also making space for difference and change.
My approach is rooted in relational depth, embodied presence, and trauma-informed awareness. I see therapy as a collaborative process where we slow down and pay attention not only to words, but also to what is happening underneath them — in the body, emotions, patterns, and silence.
Together, we explore the ways you may have learned to survive, protect yourself, or adapt to your environment, while gently creating space for the parts of you that may have felt unseen or pushed aside.
I work in a way that is compassionate, curious, and grounded in the therapeutic relationship itself. Rather than focusing only on symptoms, I am interested in your lived experience, your relationships, and the wider contexts that have shaped you.
I hold a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology, a Master’s degree in Social Psychology, and a Master’s degree in Psychotherapy.
My academic background has given me a strong foundation in understanding human development, neurodevelopment, relationships, identity, and the ways people adapt within family, cultural, and social systems. Alongside my psychotherapy training, this continues to inform the relational, trauma-aware, and culturally sensitive way I work with clients.
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