Lacanian psychoanalysis

may be understood as a continuation of Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis. Where Freud ended, Lacan continued.

Jacques Lacan was a French psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who became known for his reinterpretation of Freud’s texts, once famously stating: “What I have written should not be read carelessly.”

Jacques Lacan developed new concepts in psychoanalysis that offer the possibility of achieving deeper and more meaningful outcomes in working with the individual and their suffering.

I believe that

Lacanian psychoanalysis

provides an opportunity to approach each patient in an individual way and, above all, to create a space where they can speak about themselves. The therapeutic or analytic setting opens space for questions, suffering, and for what may otherwise remain unspoken.

Jacques Lacan developed new concepts in psychoanalysis that offer the possibility of achieving deeper and more meaningful outcomes in working with the individual and their suffering.

Analytic work helps me support others in finding answers when they feel unstable and encourages them to ask questions even where certainty seems strong; to engage with the causes of their suffering, unconscious conflicts and fantasies that influence the way a person thinks, acts, and participates in relationships with others, so they can discover where they wish to go further.

Analytic work takes place in what surprises us, in what we do not know.

Analytic work happens through words, and through desire and thinking. It is grounded in positions that the analyst explores as possibilities which I would not insist on knowing in advance.

Talking can change everything

A single analytic session lasts up to 45 minutes.

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