I studied psychology at the Catholic University of Louvain. After a bachelor's and a master's degree in clinical psychology, specialized in neuropsychology and adult clinical psychology, I completed postgraduate training specializing in integrative psychotherapy, still at UCL.
I regularly add to my specialization courses shorter and specific training: multiple intelligences, psycho-education, eating disorders, etc.
I spent several months at the Revalidation and Traumatology Center of the Erasmus hospital as a neuropsychologist. I carried out neuropsychological assessments and individual and group interventions. I then headed towards the field of high potential, where I worked with the non-profit association Relaxeau carrying out high potential assessments with children, adolescents and adults as well as psychotherapeutic care. I also gained experience as a speaker.
From 2019 to 2022, I worked part-time at my office and part-time at the ADHD-HP consultations at the Saint-Luc clinic of Move. I resumed the same schedule today between my private consultations and the neuropsychology and adult psychology consultations for the psychiatry department of the Notre-Dame-De-Grace clinic (CNDG) in Gosselies
But also ...
I am a man, which is relatively rare in this profession. Without being a specialist in this topic, I noticed that my gender plays an important role in sessions. It can help establish a stronger connection and greater therapeutic effectiveness, whether by increasing our similarities with my patients or precisely by contrasting our differences with my patients. Men consult two to four times less than women and this can be explained by many factors, particularly sociological. At a time when the cause of gender equality is increasingly better defended, it is crucial to recognize the differences and specificities between men and women, including in psychology. Without falling into stereotypes, the framework of my consultations is flexible to allow everyone to find themselves in their own therapy, in particular by taking into account our gender identities.
Since I was 6 years old, I I was a scout, animator then an executive with the Baden-Powell Scouts Federation of Belgium. As a manager, one of my tasks is notably the training of facilitators, which is influenced and influences my approach to psychotherapy, particularly in the choice of the name of this website. The values and the Scout method are deeply rooted in me, as are the experience I have acquired and the skills I have been able to develop through this movement.
Apart from psychology and scouting, I am a handyman, a geek and a lover of animals, particularly dogs!