
Psychodiagnosis
PSYCHODIAGNOSIS
Psychodiagnosis is the initial means of understanding a person’s problems, personality knots, and the symptoms that shape their presence in the world; without it, it is impossible to find orientation. Treatment, always directed toward the individual, draws upon the therapist’s broad training and extensive experience.
Therapeutic interventions take into account the various stages of life, as symptoms carry different meanings and lead to different consequences. Depression, trauma, phobias, and anxiety manifest in diverse and changing ways from person to person and across different life circumstances. Migration, generational conflicts, relationship, couple, and cultural difficulties tell stories that await understanding and seek resolution.
The methods used in therapy include psychoanalytic psychotherapy, Freudian psychoanalysis, and Jungian depth psychology.
Therapy is available in Italian and German.