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Evolve your practice with Supervision

Supervision is a safe and reflective space where you as a practitioner of psychotherapy can slow down, and deeply explore your work and relationships with your clients. Instead of rushing to the next task, supervision invites you to pause, sense, and reflect - creating room for new insights and possibilities to emerge.

My approach to supervision centers on three core areas:

  • Your Toolbox: Together, we examine and expand your methods, tools, theory and frameworks, helping you strengthen your professional skills, how to apply them and adapt your practice to each unique client.

  • Your Client Contact: We explore the relational dynamics between you and your clients-often called transference and countertransference. We discern when you’re acting from therapeutic integrity versus old patterns, using these moments as gateways for growth. This process ensure you meet clients with presence, clarity, and integrity.

  • Your Authenticity and Self-Contact: We work on your ability to stay connected to yourself, maintain balance, and remain true to your values-even when faced with challenges.

Supervision is always tailored to your current needs and can address specific cases, personal dilemmas, or your ongoing professional development. My perspective is bodily anchored and inspired by Bodynamic theory and framework, integrating bodily sensations and reactions as valuable sources of information in the supervision process.

The framework for supervision is clear and supportive:

  • Clear agreements about roles, purpose, and time

  • Focus on exploration, mirroring, and reflection-not just solutions

  • Input from the supervisor - from my professional experience

  • Development of treatment strategies and professional practice

Supervision is both a professional and personal development space, supporting you in balancing knowledge, authenticity, and relational presence-for the benefit of both you and your clients

What can I help with?

Supervision can be a helpful for gaining new perspectives on your challenges and develop your professional role. Here are some of the topics that I address in supervision:

Improvement of Skills

Supervision allows therapists to develop and enhance their clinical skills through feedback and advice from an experienced.

Reflection on Practice

Through supervision, therapists gain time and space to reflect on their own reactions and feelings in therapeutic relationships, which can lead to a deeper understanding of their practice.

Safety and Support

Having a supervisor creates a sense of safety, where therapists can share concerns and challenges without fear of judgment.

Anxiety and Stress

Many people experience anxiety that can manifest as worries, panic, or generalized stress. Psychotherapy can help identify triggers and develop coping strategies.

Ethical Guidance

Supervision helps therapists navigate complex ethical dilemmas, ensuring they act in accordance with professional standards.

Adaptation of Therapy Methods

Through supervision, therapists can gain insights into when and how to adapt different therapy methods to meet the unique needs of each client.

Stress Management

Supervision provides therapists with a space to process work-related stress and challenges, which can prevent burnout and promote mental well-being.

Knowledge Sharing

Through discussions with supervisors and colleagues, therapists can learn about new approaches and evidence-based methods that they can implement in their practice