Adult therapists in London, Greater London Greater London, United Kingdom GB

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Abergavenny, Wales  therapist: Miranda Seymour-Smith, registered psychotherapist
Adult

Miranda Seymour-Smith

Registered Psychotherapist, UKCP registered psychoanalytic psychotherapist
I am a psychoanalytic psychotherapist which means I help my clients explore the deeper patterns which might be at work in their lives. We work together to make sense of things and bring more clarity and confidence  
15 Years Experience
Online in London, Greater London
Halifax, Nova Scotia therapist: Claire Silvester, counselor/therapist
Adult

Claire Silvester

Counsellor/Therapist, MSC (Psych), BSc (Psych), Certified Sex Therapy Informed Professional (CSTIP), RP.
I work and have lived internationally practising psychology, psychotherapy counselling and executive coaching. My practice leans towards relationships and couples virtually. I am warm and offer a down to earth, integrated approach to improving communication and connection.  
19 Years Experience
Online in London, Greater London
Bristol, England  therapist: Jimi Katsis, counselor/therapist
Adult

Jimi Katsis

Counsellor/Therapist, MA psych, Dip SW
Hi, i'm Jimi Katsis. I'm a qualified psychotherapist with a specialism in working with people who have suffered abuse or trauma as children. I have successfully treated victims of the trauma of child abuse and the fallout as it impacts adult life for over 20 years. Often symptoms of deep depression, anxiety, lack of self esteem aggression and deep seated anger as well as difficulties in social and intimate relationships are outcomes from having suffered from a abusive childhood environment. I am very passionate about the work that i do and invest in building a solid therapeutic relationship. This is work we do together to find the outcome you want to live the life you choose rather than a life you were given. I offer a free initial consult so we can meet and talk through what you are looking for.  
25 Years Experience
Online in London, Greater London
Eastleigh, England therapist: Vicky Mould, counselor/therapist
Adult

Vicky Mould

Counsellor/Therapist, Accredited Professional Registrant (PNCPS Acc.)
Counselling can be a helpful next step if you're struggling with any aspect of your life or relationships and would like support to bring about healing or change. Welcome. I'm Vicky Mould. Thank you so much for coming to my profile. If you're seeking counselling for the first time, finding the right therapist is important. I hope the information you find here (and on my website) helps you make an informed decision about me as your therapist. I am an experienced bereavement counsellor and mental health therapist, and I have a specialist interest in working with people impacted by loss and grief - including baby loss, relationship issues - including the effects of domestic abuse, and mental health issues such as anxiety, depression, postnatal depression, PTSD, BPD, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. I am a down-to-earth, friendly-natured counsellor who can help you feel at ease. Practising person-centred therapy, I will work to help you feel part of a genuinely safe and supportive relationship. Sessions are confidential, and you will be valued, accepted, heard and understood. We can work at your pace to find your sense of coping, healing or wellbeing. Counselling with me can offer relief, insight, hope and increased confidence and trust in yourself. My goal in our counselling is to support and empower you to move forward with a healthier or more fulfilling life. If you'd like to explore counselling, you can contact me to ask any questions or arrange a 60-minute low-cost consultation.  
13 Years Experience
Online in London, Greater London
Dublin, County Dublin therapist: John Castleford, registered psychotherapist
Adult

John Castleford

Registered Psychotherapist, MA, mARCHTI
Many therapists focus on what is "wrong" and use 'referring issues' as the starting point. However, current best practice strongly suggests that personal introspection, guided or not, tends to keep the pain of the past very much in the present. If you want to focus on what is adversely affecting you, what better way to keep the brain tuned in to it is staying focused on it. I base my approaches on the very latest findings from neuroscience, and my starting point is often the time when you were at your best, and experiencing high points in your life: by recalling those we not bring great memories into our present focus but we also recreate those wonderful feelings we felt at that time. So, just as you do your best work when you are at the top of your game, focusing on positive rather than negative feelings from the past is a great place to begin work. Just ask yourself if you make your best decisions when you are feeling low. Now compare that to when you have been so buoyed up that you feel all but unstoppable. Most people aren't 'broken'. But they may be side-lined or undermined. Or held back, Stuck, or otherwise constrained by a mismatch between expectations/aspirations and how you feel. The logical bits of the brain don't always align with emotions and feelings. Maybe external circumstances have contributed to persistent low mood. Perhaps your self-esteem took a nose-dive, or you find it hard to cope, or don't feel you're in control anymore. Our thoughts often control us, and our feelings -- and our behaviour often depends on how we feel. So do our thoughts and the associated feelings prevent us from becoming the best version of who we could (and should) be? Are your thoughts stopping you from being the best version of who you could be? I suspect it probably wasn't always like this. I f I can't make you feel better about yourself within 15 minutes then I don't deserve to work with you. Why not let me use my academic background (degrees in anthropology, and a degree in education) as well as decades of experience in psychological support, coaching, education, and psychotherapy to help you? As well as general issues, such as low mood, phobias and traumatic experiences, I also specialise in existential therapy and have an extensive background in the philosophy of Stoicism [not the unemotional/stiff-upper-lip Mr Spock version] on which Albert Ellis' REBT and Aaron Beck's CBT both based their therapeutic approaches. I draw on a broad background in academia, teaching (secondary and higher education), anthropology, philosophy, neurology and psychology which I update continuously. I suspect Neurology and Psychology are boring through the proverbial mountain towards each other but they are still some distance apart. So insights from both are useful. I feel the therapeutic professions tend to over-label conditions too readily and that often means their clients identify with the label. I have a wide range of theoretical orientations and can utilize specialist modalities and interventions that are appropriate for the client. I list specialties below and also include testimonials that describe outcomes that speak more eloquently than any personal statement.  
14 Years Experience
Online in London, Greater London