Dr Trudy Clutterbok Psychoanalyst.
Psychotherapy and Counselling in Parkville and North Fitzroy.
I’m Trudy Clutterbok, for thirty years, I've worked as a counsellor, senior clinician, community worker, educator and clinical supervisor across many of the community and mental health services in Victoria.
Are you looking for a psychoanalyst in Brunswick or psychoanalysis in North Fitzroy?
Perhaps you’re looking for a therapist in Parkville, or a counsellor in the inner north of Melbourne.
I'm happy to have a conversation with anyone who is interested in working with me.
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PSYCHOANALYSIS
Contemporary, Feminist, Queer-friendly
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SUPERVISION
Clinical supervision or professional reflective practice. One-to-one, group, in-person or online
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COUNSELLING
Medicare rebated mental-health counselling or private counselling and psychotherapy
I'm especially interested in working with people who feel that they are outsiders, with adults who were bright or gifted children, with artists and writers, LGBTQ+ folk and those who suffer from long-term grief and bereavement.
I love working locally. Walking, cycling and making local connections increases people's happiness and sense of place. Living slowly allows us to develop a practice of close reading.
Are you looking for a local counselling service, a psychoanalyst nearby, or local therapist?
I offer counselling and psychotherapy in Parkville and North Fitzroy
Follow me on Instagram
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Dr. Trudy Clutterbok has been a proudly Queer owned and operated service since the turn of the century
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Dr. Trudy Clutterbok acknowledges the traditional custodians of the stolen land, waters and skies on which we work and live. She pays her deepest respects to elders past and present and the continuity of their peoples for the past 65,000 years on this unceded land
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Dr Trudy Clutterbok respects the human experiences of Madness, Disability, and Difference in mind, heart, and body. She recognises the courage of those who - despite stigma and prohibition - express themselves through art, writing, activism, everyday life and speech. She especially acknowledges the Australian Psychiatric and Disability Consumer movements, including the founders of CAPIC and the Collective of Self-Help Groups in Melbourne who housed the early activists. Trudy also supports the ISPS campaign to 'Drop the label of Schizophrenia'.