Clinical Psychology

Therapy room setting, representing clinical psychology

Clinical Psychology focuses on understanding psychological distress and promoting mental health across the lifespan. It considers how experiences, relationships, beliefs, and coping patterns shape emotions and choices. The work often includes assessing difficulties such as anxiety, depression, stress, grief, sleep problems, or low self esteem, and building pathways for change grounded in scientific evidence. A central element is the therapeutic relationship, a safe space where a person can organize their story and try new ways of being. I value the integration of listening, psychoeducation, and practices that support autonomy, without promising quick fixes. Clinical work is also prevention, learning to recognize signals, ask for help, and care for yourself before reaching the limit. During my studies, I want to deepen intervention models and critical reading of research, and learn how to adapt language and techniques to each person. Calmly.