I invite you to go deep

Counseling and Psychotherapy

A few words about professional maturity

I am not a general psychologist. I specialize in trauma—clinical, war-related, and intergenerational. My professional background includes decades of training, several areas of specialization, graduate studies, and weekly peer supervision sessions with colleagues. I have continued my practice throughout the entire full-scale war.

You can’t go out and find the right therapist—you can only come across one. We might click and walk together down the challenging path of psychological work, recovery, and change. Or we might not. Both outcomes are perfectly normal.

Tetiana Stanislavska

psychoanalyst, clinical psychologist

What I don’t do:

1

I don’t restrict myself to psychoanalysis

In our work, we can use not only psychodynamic therapy, but also schema therapy, transference-focused therapy, narrative therapy, and art therapy.

2

I stay reachable within agreed boundaries

Between sessions, brief contact via messaging apps is permitted within the framework of previously agreed-upon guidelines. In crisis situations, we will discuss the format of support on a case-by-case basis.

3

I don’t interrupt

If the time for the meeting has passed but you are still crying, I don’t interrupt the session and instead give you the chance to finish and calm down. You don’t need to pay for that additional time.

4

I don’t come late

Our therapy sessions always start on time.

5

I don’t raise the fee during therapy

Having agreed the price once, I don’t raise it even if it has changed for others.

 

6

I don’t forget

I listen carefully and keep track of your story. You won’t need to tell the same story several times.