Nicole didn't always know she wanted to be a psychologist. She discovered it while searching — and once she found it, there was no turning back.
@cuttie.nicoleClinical Psychologist · Individual Sessions · Children, adolescents, and adults
Who she is and what she does
Nicole is a clinical psychologist. In her practice, she sees children, adolescents, and adults — each with their own process, their own pace, their own story. Her work doesn't follow a single formula: she accompanies each person from where they are, to where they need to go.
What defines her most is not the technique she applies, but how she sees the person in front of her. With attention, with patience, with the conviction that each person has the capacity to heal.
Why she chose this path
Nicole didn't start by studying psychology. Her first career was industrial design. She progressed, she fulfilled her duties, but she felt something was missing — a feeling hard to name but impossible to ignore.
She started searching on her own. She read psychology books almost by chance, and something in those pages spoke to her in a way that design never had. She fell in love with the discipline before formally studying it. And when it became clear to her, she made the decision: she changed careers.
It wasn't the most direct path. But it was hers.
"It wasn't always my dream, but it's something I acquired over time."
What she believes about psychology
For Nicole, the most valuable part of her work isn't measured in sessions or diagnoses. It's measured in faces.
Something happens with patients during the therapeutic process that she describes better than anyone: they arrive one way, and little by little they become another. Their face changes. Their attitude changes. They start making decisions they couldn't make before, choosing themselves in ways they didn't allow before.
Seeing that transformation, accompanying it from within, is what makes every day worthwhile — even the most tiring ones.
"Seeing how they heal in therapy, for me, is priceless."
The moment she doesn't forget
During her professional internships, Nicole worked at a center for people with intellectual disabilities and motor problems. There, she met a girl with cerebral palsy. She couldn't speak. Communication, at first, seemed impossible.
But Nicole didn't give up. Together, they found a way to understand each other, and they found it. At some point in the process, the girl told her something Nicole hasn't forgotten: that no one, ever before, had made the effort to communicate with her.
No one.
That moment taught her a lesson that no psychology book can fully summarize: that speaking, moving, being heard — things we take for granted every day — are actually an enormous privilege. And that sometimes, the most therapeutic act there is simply making the effort to truly see someone.
Where she's going and what she tells those just starting out
In ten years, Nicole envisions herself at the head of a psychology center. A space different from what exists today: a place where each patient, regardless of age, can choose the therapeutic approach that best suits their needs — without being confined to a single one. A center that also integrates other health professionals to offer truly comprehensive care.
The idea comes from her own conviction: that mental health doesn't fit into a single box, and that every person deserves personalized care.
For anyone who wants to follow her path, the message is clear and direct:
"You can do it, keep going. If it's your passion, work extremely hard — because all the effort you're putting in now is completely worth it."