Unfortunately patriarchy, consumer culture, all these things affect couples in a negative way. You may think it doesn’t affect you but it’s about all of us. We live in this society and learn these values and ideologies about how we should be in the world.

We think we believe certain things, like that we are a feminist, but often the way we live our life does not embody our beliefs. The oppression is always there, whether we are aware of it or not.

– Silvia Dutchevici

What is Critical Therapy? How does power come into play in our intimate relationships? What does love in psychotherapy look like?

Find out in this week’s episode of The Learn to Love Podcast, where your host Zach Beach interviews the incredible therapist Silvia Dutchevici.

Ep 114: Love in Psychotherapy with Silvia Dutchevici

Listen on:

Apple Podcasts || Stitcher || TuneIn ||  Google Podcasts || Spotify || Amazon Music || Castbox

About Silvia Dutchevici

Silvia M. Dutchevici, MA, LCSW, is president and founder of the Critical Therapy Institute. A trained psychotherapist, Dutchevici created critical therapy on perceiving a need for the theory and practice of psychology to reflect how race, class, gender, and religion intersect with psychological conflicts.

She is a founding board member of Black Women’s Blueprint and a member of the Physicians for Human Right’s Asylum Network, where she conducts psychological evaluations documenting evidence of torture and persecution for survivors fleeing danger in their home countries.

Dutchevici has a master’s degree in social work from New York University and a master’s degree in psychology from the New School, and a bachelor’s degree in religious studies and political science from Fordham University

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