Psychosynthesis is a deeply integrative and psychospiritual approach to therapy. It can be used with adults, teenagers, and couples — and is especially supportive for those seeking a more meaningful and transformative experience in therapy. Unlike models that focus solely on symptoms or pathology, psychosynthesis holds a view of the person that is fundamentally hopeful. It doesn’t see people as broken or flawed, but as individuals with profound potential for growth, healing, and inner coherence. Developed by psychiatrist Roberto Assagioli, psychosynthesis builds on the foundations of Freud and Jung, bringing depth psychology into the realm of spirit, creativity, and meaning. It invites us to explore not only our past wounds but also our higher nature — what we are becoming. This work draws from many streams: psychoanalysis, somatic awareness, behaviourism, ancestral influences, and our physical and environmental realities. It explores the interplay between mind, body, emotion, and spirit — past, present, and future — in a way that is both grounded and expansive. For me, psychosynthesis offers what I can only describe as a spherical and infinite perspective. It is the central framework I draw from in my therapeutic practice, offering clients a compassionate space to reconnect with themselves, their story, and their deeper potential.