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Naphtali Marshall

What is psychodynamic therapy?

Psychodynamic therapy is a collaborative process that helps you connect more deeply with your inner world and relate to your challenges in new ways. It’s based on the understanding that early experiences and relationships shape how you feel, relate, and respond to life—even in ways you may not fully realize.

Psychodynamic therapy is not just about analyzing yourself from a distance, but about feeling into your experience and discovering what it’s like to be more fully in touch with yourself.

How can psychodynamic therapy help?

In therapy, you have space to slow down, notice, and be curious about what arises in your life and in the moment—your emotions, patterns, and the possible meanings that live beneath the surface.

You can begin to explore the root of what’s troubling you, how you’ve been coping with it, and what might be getting in the way of change. Focused, deep listening can enable new and previously unheard parts of yourself to emerge.

What can you expect in psychodynamic therapy?

Psychodynamic therapy can help you find relief from many of the concerns that bring people to therapy, including depression, anxiety, trauma, relationship difficulties, low self-esteem, shame, and challenges with emotional regulation.

By allowing space for difficult feelings, therapy can help those emotions move and shift, making room for new ways of being. Over time, this process can bring greater ease, self-compassion, and authenticity—helping you feel more grounded, connected, and alive in your relationships and in yourself.

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Key elements of psychodynamic therapy

  • Psychological difficulties can stem from disconnection from your inner world—the thoughts, feelings, and desires that shape who you are.

    Psychodynamic therapy offers a space to experience, express, and make sense of your emotions. As you grow more attuned to your inner life, you can build a stronger sense of self, authenticity and and wholeness.

  • Early experiences can shape how you connect—with yourself and with others.

    Psychodynamic therapy can help you notice how old patterns quietly repeat, opening the door to greater emotional freedom and more fulfilling relationships.

  • You might not always be aware of the thoughts, feelings, and desires that influence your behavior—but they are still at work.

    Psychodynamic therapy can help you connect with unconscious processes—including dreams—and explore their symbolic meaning, fostering emotional relief and greater ease in your life and relationships.

  • You might notice yourself acting in ways that feel misaligned, repetitive or self-defeating, even when you “know” better.

    Psychodynamic therapy can help you link intellectual understanding with emotional awareness. Bringing insight and feeling together allows for deeper, longer-lasting, and more embodied change.

  • Often, the challenges and patterns that bring you to therapy appear in the therapeutic process itself. Exploring feelings about therapy or towards your therapist can shed light on deeper relational dynamics and emotional experiences that shape your life.

    Psychodynamic therapy uses this as an opportunity to be curious about what is happening, what it may reveal, and how you might work through these feelings to relate to yourself and others in a freer and more authentic way.

  • While therapy can help you illuminate hidden patterns, it can also help you nurture tolerance for uncertainty and acceptance of life’s inherent mysteries.

    Psychodynamic therapy takes a stance of curiosity and humility, recognizing that you—not the therapist—are the ultimate authority on your own experience, and that some aspects of life are simply unknowable.

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