Services Provided

Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy
KAP is a powerful healing approach that combines the medicine ketamine with the guidance of psychotherapy. Together they create a supportive pathway for deep emotional healing and personal growth. Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic which induces a state of altered consciousness that can make people more open, flexible and less defended, while combining psychotherapy to explore, integrate and apply into the person’s life what arises during those experiences. This therapy supports healing for depression (including treatment-resistant), anxiety disorders, Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), addiction and compulsive behaviors, end-of-life distress (existential or spiritual suffering). Ketamine-assisted psychotherapy promotes neuroplasticity, disruption of rigid patterns.

Flower Essence
Therapy
A holistic approach that supports emotional wellbeing by utilizing individual flower mixes targeting specific issues to be addressed. They work on the emotional and energetic levels helping release limiting patterns such as fear, anxiety, self-doubt, indecision, grief or overwhelm among others. When the emotional field is balanced, people often experience more clarity, resilience, calm and alignment with their true nature. Developed in the 1930s by Dr Edward Bach, a British physician and visionary healer, his system includes 38 traditional remedies each addressing a unique emotional pattern. There are nowadays many more flower essences developed from species of plants from all around the world.

Psychedelic Preparation And Integration
Psychotherapy aimed at guiding individuals working with psychedelics in a legal setting, providing guidance to prepare for and integrate their experience, helping them approach the process with clarity, safety and intention. Preparation focuses on creating a grounded mindset, establishing clear goals, and understanding emotional, psychological and practical considerations. After the experience, integration offers a structured space to reflect on insights, regulate challenging emotions, and translate meaningful moments into sustainable change. Together, these phases help transform psychedelic experiences into long-lasting personal growth and deeper self-understanding.

Mindfulness
Mindfulness in psychotherapy helps clients develop a calm, present-moment awareness of their thoughts, emotions, and body sensations. Instead of reacting automatically or getting pulled into past and future worries, clients learn to observe their inner experience with curiosity and compassion. This grounded awareness reduces emotional reactivity, increases clarity and supports healthier choices. Mindfulness based approaches are often used to ease anxiety, stress, and mood challenges, while strengthening overall emotional resilience and self-connection.

Calatonia &
Subtle Touch
Calatonia is a gentle somatic approach that uses subtle touch to regulate the nervous system, induce deep relaxation, balance and healing. Developed by Hungarian physician Petho Sandor in the mid-20th century, it is rooted in both Jungian psychology and somatic approaches to trauma healing. It consists of light sustained touch applied by a therapist to specific points on the body often beginning with the feet or hands. The touch is non-invasive and neutral, allowing the nervous system to register safety and presence without triggering defense mechanisms. This activates the parasympathetic nervous system, shifting the body out of the fight-or-flight into the rest-and-digest mode. The subtle inputs promotes neurophysiological reorganization, allowing the body to release chronic holding patterns.

EMDR
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a therapeutic method designed to help people process distressing memories, emotional triggers, and limiting beliefs that remain “stuck” in the nervous system. Instead of relying only on talk therapy EMDR uses bilateral stimulation- such as eye movement, tapping or sounds- to activate both hemispheres of the brain while the client recalls specific experiences. This dual attention process allows the brain to reorganize the way the memory is stored. The emotional charge softens, the body’s stress response calms, and the client can integrate the experience in a healthier more adaptive way. Over time, the memory remains, but its intensity and grip on daily life diminish significantly. EMDR is widely used for trauma, anxiety, phobias, grief, and patterns rooted in early life experiences.

Evidence-Based:
CBT and DBT
Among sought after evidence-based approaches supported by the research literature are CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) and DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy). CBT is a practical, goal-focused approach that helps clients understand how their thoughts, emotions, and behaviors influence each other. By identifying unhelpful thinking patterns and replacing them with more balanced perspectives, clients learn to respond to challenges in healthier, more effective ways. CBT offers structured tools to reduce anxiety, depression, and stress, while building long-term skills for clarity, resilience, and emotional well-being. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) helps people manage intense emotions and build healthier coping skills. It combines mindfulness with practical tools for calming distress, regulating emotions, and improving communication. DBT supports clients in creating more balance, stability, and resilience in everyday life.

Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
A depth-based approach that explores conscious and unconscious layers of a person’s experience. Rooted in the work of Carl Jung, it views emotional difficulties not only as symptoms to be managed but also as signals pointing toward deeper meaning, inner balance, or unmet psychological needs. This approach emphasizes the therapeutic relationship, symbolic exploration, and the integration of unconscious material- including dreams, imagery, patterns, and emotions. By bringing these inner dynamics into awareness, clients can better understand the roots of their struggles and move toward greater wholeness. Jungian work supports the development of a more authentic self, helping individuals navigate transitions, unresolved past experiences, creative blocks, and feelings of disconnection. It offers a thoughtful, reflective space where insight, personal meaning and emotional growth can emerge naturally and sustainably.
