What problems are worked on?

Perhaps those who read me may think that it would be simpler to put a list of things addressed in therapy or the names of the diseases or ailments that the patients have suffered from; however, making a list like this seems a lack of rigor to me, given the perspective from which I work.

My way of working is based on considering the body as a complex, self-organized, and adaptive system. Thus, the problems with which a person comes to therapy cannot be parceled out, segmented, or dissociated from the functioning of their body and their individuality (matter, biology, and psyche) as a complex system.

Thus, the ailment or condition for which a person comes to therapy is always the result of a process that began before it had become a physical and obvious manifestation; furthermore, this manifestation is not an accidental or isolated event but fits into the person’s life story.

That said, the ailments or conditions for which people usually come are multiple: some come for specific acute, chronic, or incipient physical processes; others due to more emotional issues such as anxiety and stress caused by known situations or by causes that do not correlate with a present reality; and others come to sessions as a way of self-care.

In any case, the work done in the consultation is not intended to and cannot replace medical treatment. The techniques with which I work are not an alternative to Medicine but complementary techniques that consider the body, health, and illness as dynamic processes with their own history that belong to the individual as a whole.