Works with: | Individuals |
Sessions: | Face-to-Face |
Languages: | English |
Locations: | Clapham |
Mhonh Bancyr-de-Angeli
Mhonh Bancyr-de-Angeli is a clinical transactional analysis psychotherapist in her final year of training, working toward their MSc in Psychotherapy and a student member of UKCP (UK Council for Psychotherapy), Metanoia Institute and IARTA (International Association of Relational Transactional Analysis). She works with The Awareness Centre in Clapham.
For Mhonh, psychotherapy is a space of meeting. It is a space where you can safely explore your life: its present and past events as well as your current and past relationships. Mhonh is here to listen to you and to support you to untangle what you feel is important to examine and understand. Mhonh offers a space of understanding, curiosity, reflection. During therapy process we will work with your personal stories that concrete who you are. Mhonh will work with what you want and feel you need to address and recognise in yourself. She will observe the ways you make meaning so we can look deeper into how you have arrived at conclusions about life, the world at large, other people. We will observe patterns of your behaviour and thinking that might have been affecting your sense of fulfilment both professionally and personally. Together, we will explore their origins as well as the beliefs and emotions that could have determined them.
Mhonh works with gender, sexuality and cultural identities; they work with trauma, distressing memories, depression, stress, anxiety, shame, anger, relationships problems. Mhonh works with personal histories that co-create who you are. She works along you; with what you want and feel you need to address and recognise in yourself.
Mhonh has a background in cultural studies, visual and performing arts. Mhonh also works for a charity working with people who have lived experience of homelessness, substance misuse, who have difficulties in maintaining healthy relationships including family of origins. She works with people who find it difficult to address their physical health, who find it challenging to be part of groups, communities, organisations.