Isabella Zoltowski:
Trainee Psychotherapist (BACP & UKCP student member)
My name is Isabella Zoltowski, I am a trainee psychotherapist working in the low-cost therapy and counselling service at HQ Therapy Rooms in Haggerston and Dalston, Hackney, London E8.
I am currently studying for an MA in Psychotherapy & Counselling at Regent’s University and have received my readiness to practice. I am a student member of the BACP & UKCP and adhere to their ethical framework.
I work with clients experiencing problems in living that include stress, anxiety and depression, insomnia, PTSD, trauma as well as identity, self-worth, and relationship issues.
I am currently available for in-person, low-cost therapy sessions, on either a short or long-term basis.
Before coming to therapy I had a career as a Talent & Literary agent and have a wealth of experience working with clients on a one-to-one basis, advising them on their media careers and creative output.
Later I moved to psychotherapy after some personal life-changing events because I found myself drawn to my client’s whole emotional and psychological well-being beyond their work life and careers.
I bring my whole life experience to the therapeutic relationship and believe that it is the quality of this relationship that is the most transformative aspect of therapy.
An empathetic relationship in therapy will help you process difficult experiences with a kinder, less critical filter which helps you form better relationships and a fuller understanding of yourself and your self-worth.
I am training as an integrative therapist which means I draw on different types of therapy modalities to suit the different needs and personalities of my clients, looking at how your past experiences and future assumptions affect your present.
As an empathetic listener, I will help you understand your world, examine your assumptions, and process difficult emotions as you find your way through life.
I look forward to meeting you and beginning our work together.
“The spirit of a man is constructed out of his choices” (Yalom, “When Nietzsche Wept”)