My professional path brings together psychology and business. After graduating from Kyiv Linguistic University in 1997, and a few years later from Kyiv National Economic University, I worked in marketing, PR, and project management for Ukrainian and international companies such as Intel, HP, IBM. I managed my own business, worked in film and radio, participated in parliamentary and presidential election campaigns, and organized international conferences and seminars. This experience allows me to deeply understand what it means to work under pressure, with high responsibility and expectations — in business, partnerships, and life.
I began my psychological practice in 2006 during my training at the Moscow Gestalt Institute in Kyiv. Alongside my business career, I completed multiple trainings in efficiency, planning, and team and project management. In 2022, I deepened my expertise in systemic constellations and cognitive behavioral therapy while working with refugees and war-related trauma. Seeking to systematize my knowledge, I obtained my psychology degree from Khmelnytskyi National University in January 2026.
From the first days of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, I worked as a psychologist with the Caritas Foundation (Khmelnytskyi): providing individual counseling and crisis support for adults and children, leading stabilization groups for people affected by the war, and attending international trainings in psychological support in conflict settings. This includes over 1,500 hours of work with trauma, loss, fear, and restoring inner stability.
In 2024, I relocated to France. Within a year, I obtained local education in hospitality and tourism. I continue to combine my work in business with my psychological practice, primarily online.
For me, psychology is not just a profession, but a personal path — from learning and disillusionment to integration and the development of my own system of values and philosophy.
I work with adults and couples on issues of identity, career, relationships, self-worth, difficult decisions, crises, and life transitions. What matters to me is real transformation — changes that are actually lived and experienced in everyday life.
For professional reasons, I do not share personal details about my private life. It is important to me that clients are not limited by perceptions shaped by the therapist's personal story. At the same time, I remain open to questions if they arise in the process and if my experience can be helpful.