For Who?
Hypnosis has effects on three levels:
Physical: psychosomatic manifestations, pain management, dermatological disorders, etc.
Behavioral: addictions, weight management, sleep quality improvement, shyness, phobias, etc.
Personal and emotional development: management of stress and emotions, self-confidence and self-esteem, development of creativity, mourning, separation, preparation for competitions, exams, etc.
Important: The practice of hypnosis in no way replaces medical advice or treatment. Only a doctor can make diagnoses and he alone is authorized to prescribe, modify or withdraw a medical treatment. Any questions relating to the medical field should be addressed to your attending physician.
The support and psychological follow-up consultation can be individual, couple or family. Always adjusted to the patient, it can take different forms depending on whether they are children, adolescents, adults or seniors.
Whether your child is going through a period of ill-being or has symptoms that alert and question you, it may be relevant to seek psychological support in order to discuss it together and offer him a neutral space for discussion.
During the first session:
- I first welcome the child with his parents, so that they can formulate together the difficulties encountered.
- The interview then continues one-on-one with the child.
During the following sessions, I will directly see my young patient alone.
As for teenagers, I first receive them alone. A time with the parents is then possible, in their presence and with their agreement.
What your child entrusts to me will remain confidential so that he can give himself freely.
I do not practice psychological assessments.
Individual therapy provides a framework in which one can express oneself freely and safely. In a common search, the therapist helps the patient to develop his own answers to the different questions that brought him to therapy. Individual therapy starts from a model of participation in which the patient is given responsibility for his own life.
Various forms of difficulties and various problems can lead an adult to take the step of consulting a psychologist.
Different circumstances can weaken a person temporarily or in the long term. It can be a particularly painful moment in life (mourning, illness, breakup, separation, etc.) The process of consulting a psychologist can help to understand what is at stake for the person in order to gradually overcome the difficulties and to allow him to live better.
A couple or a family can take the step of consulting a psychologist when communication becomes difficult or when conflict situations are repeated and take place over time.
Couple and family difficulties can have multiple origins and can undergo changes over time.
Consultations with a clinical psychologist, who represents a third person who always remains neutral and benevolent in his observations of family and couple dynamics, aim to overcome conflicts and ease tensions in order to find a better communication between members.
- Couples therapy focuses on relationship issues within the couple and requires the presence of both spouses. A couple may be in crisis and unable to deal with their internal problems. In this context, the therapist encourages the members of the couple to deploy all their personal and interpersonal resources. The goal of couple therapy is not to reveal a certain truth, but to promote the appearance of other representations and experiences of reality in order to find a new balance in the couple, with a view to better harmony.
- Family therapy involves the participation of all family members as it views the psychological and behavioral disturbances of a group member as a symptom of group dysfunction. The goal of the therapeutic action is to resolve various problems and restore the family’s ability to function. The therapist addresses the whole family group instead of focusing on the individual case(s) because the suffering of one person in the family is linked to difficulties in others and it affects the group. family.