My professional career began in business and management. I worked as a financial manager, and at the time, I thought that logic, analytics, and clear systems were the most important things. But over time, I realized that the biggest challenge was not numbers, but people. Colleagues, managers, partners.
Everyone has their own emotions, fears, and ambitions. This was a turning point for me. I began to study psychology more deeply — first through personnel management and team dynamics, and then through my own personal therapy. That's where I discovered another depth: I learned to listen to myself, to allow doubts and mistakes, to be alive, not "right."
This experience led me to a new choice. Now I am a psychologist and Gestalt therapist, and my work combines professional training and my personal path of transformation.