I was born in Argentina, and my trajectory has been shaped by multiple experiences of migration and adaptation across different cultural contexts. These displacements have not only marked my personal history but have also formed the foundation of a clinical listening particularly attuned to questions of identity, belonging, and symbolic discontinuity.
The creation of PSYC emerges from this trajectory, but also from a clinical recognition of a significant gap: the absence of therapeutic spaces where language is not a barrier and where the expatriate subject can be fully received in the complexity of their experience — not only in their psychological suffering, but also in their cultural, affective, and identity inscriptions.
Over the years, I have worked with patients of diverse nationalities, which has allowed me to develop a refined understanding of the clinical nuances that arise in intercultural contexts, where uprootedness, language, and the reconstruction of reference points play a central role.
In my practice, I work with children, adolescents, adults and couples in in-depth therapeutic processes, guided by a psychodynamic approach grounded in psychoanalysis. My work is based on rigorous listening, an ethically engaged presence, and sustained attention to the singularity of everyone’s story.
I understand clinical space as one of elaboration and transformation, where, through the therapeutic relationship, it becomes possible to access new meanings and reorganize one’s inner experience in a more integrated and vital way.