Simone Webber, M.Sc., BA., B.pth.
Contacts:
praxis@psychoanalyse-wien-webber.at
+43 676 4732920
Wickenburggasse 3 / 11, 1080, Wien
Psychoanalysis and psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy
Psychotherapist (iAuS) // Psychologist
“When people say "I'm the kind of person who," my heart always sinks. These are formulas, we've all got about ten formulas about who we are, what we like, the kind of people we like, all that stuff. The disparity between these phrases and how one experiences oneself minute by minute is ludicrous. It’s like the caption under a painting. Well, yeah, I can see it’s called that. But you need to look at the picture.”
ABOUT ME
Vitae
BA.pth. in Psychotherapy Science at Sigmund Freud Private University, Vienna
BA in Philosophy at the University of Vienna
B.Sc. in Psychology at the University of Vienna
Focus on developmental psychology
Internships and work experience
Since 2015: Psychotherapeutic subject-specific-training (“Fachspäzifikum”) (in psychoanalysis and psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy)
2017: Internship at the psychiatry of Bozen/Bolzano, Italy. Including both the psychiatric out-patient and in-patient departments of the Z.P.G. Bozen/Bolzano (Zentrum für psychische Gesundheit).
2020 – 2021: working at NEUEWEGE gemeinnützige GmbH with children with some form of disability or otherwise special/different needs, including children on the autism spectrum.
Since 2021: working in own private praxis as a psychotherapist in training under supervision.
Memberships, collaborations and other activities
Member of the ÖBVP (Österreichischer Bundesverband für Psychotherapie)
Basic training in body-intervention-techniques (ProDeMa®) (de-escalation training)
“What is the normal child like? Does he just eat and grow and smile sweetly? No, that is not what he is like. A normal child, if he has confidence in father and mother, pulls out all the stops. In the course of time he tries out his power to disrupt, to destroy, to frighten, to wear down, to waste, to wangle, and to appropriate. Everything that takes people to the courts (or to the asylums, for that matter) has its normal equivalent in infancy and early childhood, in the relation of the child to his own home.”