Who this is for
Not everything we experience inwardly can immediately be put into words.
On the surface, much may remain familiar: work, family, responsibilities and daily routines. Yet beneath the surface, anxiety, tension, fatigue, emotional exhaustion or a sense of inner instability can quietly accumulate.

Outwardly, this may show itself in relationship difficulties, recurring life situations or a struggle to tolerate uncertainty. Often, deeper psychological processes are at work — ones we cannot always immediately recognise.

Therapy creates a space where one can not only find support, but also gradually explore what lies behind the symptom. In this process, what was once vague or hard to express can begin to take shape, acquire meaning and become more closely connected to your life.
Themes I work with
Support during times of loss, separation, and life transitions.
This list is intended as a guide. It is not a list of diagnoses, but of areas that often call for careful, in-depth attention. If your concern is not listed here, that does not mean you cannot bring it to therapy.
Relationship difficulties, family tension, divorce, separation, loss, emigration, or other significant changes can bring anxiety, emotional overwhelm, a sense of losing direction, or the feeling that you have partly lost touch with yourself.

In therapy, there is space to pause and make sense of what is happening.
Psychosocial and
existential concerns
Psychosocial difficulties with a deeper inner or existential dimension.
Trauma and recurring patterns
The impact of traumatic experiences and longstanding emotional patterns.
Life transitions
Questions of identity and crises at different stages of life.
Loss and significant life events
Grief, separation, loss, and experiences that have changed the course of life.
Self-worth
Negative self-image, self-doubt, and inner blocks.
Emotional difficulties
Anxiety, inner restlessness, emotional overwhelm, and exhaustion.
Stress and burnout
Stress, overload, exhaustion, and signs of burnout.
What can you come to me with?
Relationships
About the Jungian approach
Psychosocial therapy and depth-oriented analytical work
Carl Gustav Jung (1875−1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist, psychologist and the founder of analytical psychology.

The Jungian approach does not view a symptom as a problem in itself, but as an expression of a deeper inner dynamic. The unconscious plays a central role: dreams, images, symbols, recurring patterns and inner conflicts.

Particularly important is the process of individuation — a gradual movement toward greater inner wholeness, in which one comes to understand one’s contradictions, shadow, defence mechanisms and hidden resources more fully.

In this way of working, a symptom becomes not only a reason to seek relief, but also an entry point to a deeper understanding of oneself.
Psychosocial therapy and depth-oriented analytical work

In my work, I bring together my academic training in psychology, years of experience in therapeutic support, and a depth-psychological approach informed by Jungian analytical psychology.

In therapy, we focus not only on symptoms, but also on inner conflicts, recurring life patterns, images, dreams, and those parts of experience that cannot always be put into words straight away.
Mevr. drs. A. Lobach
Psychologist
Psychosocial therapist
Depth-psychological practice in the Jungian tradition
About
Session format
  • Introductory call
    A free introductory call of 15−20 minutes. You can briefly share your question or situation, and I will answer any questions you may have. Together, we explore whether this way of working is right for you.
  • Individual sessions
    Sessions take place weekly or once every two weeks and last 50 minutes. This is engaged, thoughtful, and careful work — at a pace that suits you.
  • *Please note: if a session is cancelled or missed less than 24 hours in advance, the full session fee will be charged.
Here, you can speak openly about what has been asking for attention within you.




Here, you can speak openly about what has been asking for attention within you.
Sometimes change begins with a single step.