Mark Greenaway-Robbins:
Integrative Psychotherapist (BACP, NCPS)
You might be here because something in your life feels persistent, confusing, or hard to carry on your own. Whether you’re dealing with anxiety, self-doubt, relationship challenges, identity questions, or the weight of past experiences, seeking therapy is a significant step — and it deserves a space that is both safe and genuinely collaborative.
Therapy with me is not about quick fixes or one-size-fits-all solutions. It’s about exploration — together. I see the therapeutic relationship itself as a key part of change; how we connect, how you are received, and how you get to practice being understood as you are becomes part of what transforms over time.
This is relational work at its core: attentive, responsive, and anchored in respect for your autonomy and lived experience.
I am a relational integrative psychotherapist, which means I draw on a range of therapeutic ideas and frameworks — from humanistic and psychodynamic understandings to cognitive and embodied perspectives — so that our work together is flexible and tailored to what you need in the moment.
My aim is to help you notice patterns, understand internal conflicts, make sense of emotional experiences, and develop greater agency in how you relate to yourself and others.
Many people come to therapy feeling stuck between old patterns and a desire for something different. Some arrive with clearly defined concerns; others are less certain about what they want but know that something feels unresolved or unsettled. Both experiences are welcome here. We can slow down, reflect, and gently untangle what’s most alive for you — without pressure, judgement, or expectation.
Inclusivity and affirmation are central to my practice. I welcome people of all sexual orientations, gender identities, cultural backgrounds, and neurodiverse experiences, including those who identify as LGBTQIA+. As someone who is queer, autistic, and has ADHD, I’m deeply committed to creating spaces where neurodiversity is understood with nuance and without pathologising difference.
I’m also curious about how broader social influences — such as power, systemic norms, and cultural context — shape identity and relationship dynamics when you choose to explore them.
Our work can touch on many aspects of life: relationship patterns, communication struggles, emotional overwhelm, identity exploration, grief and loss, transitions or life changes, and questions of meaning or belonging. I also bring a sex-positive, culturally sensitive, and spiritually open stance — which means we can attend to intimacy, values, and questions of purpose in ways that feel safe and respectful to you.
Therapy is an invitation to slow down enough to begin noticing what you may not yet be able to see clearly: how your inner world, history, relationships, and self-perception intersect. In that space of attentive reflection, there is room for clarity, self-compassion, and new ways of being that are grounded in your experience rather than borrowed from others’ expectations.
If you’re looking for a thoughtful, relational, and collaborative therapeutic environment — one that honours your complexity and supports your growth with care — I’d be honoured to explore this work with you.
***If you require more information and guidance about therapy, please use the contact form at the bottom of this page.***
