The Science
How it works
A therapist holds a lot in their head. The thing a patient said three weeks ago. The brother who keeps surfacing, always in the same flat tone. The week the sleeping got better and nobody clocked why. You carry it, hour after hour, and then someone new sits down at two o'clock and you start carrying theirs.
Freudche carries the long arc with you. After each session it follows one patient's story back across every session before it: the people who keep returning, the threads running quietly underneath, the charge between this patient and that person in their life shifting from one week to the next. Then it shows you what moved.
Why does that matter? Because the pattern you usually catch around session eighteen — the one that finally makes the whole picture click — was sitting in the transcript months earlier. It was just spread too thin across too many weeks for one tired human to hold all at once. Freudche holds it. You stay the clinician. It keeps the notebook open to every page at the same time.
It never diagnoses, and it never tells you what to do. It looks back over what was already said, and it surfaces the pattern. The reading is yours.
Features
Record the session, keep your eyes on the room Freudche records and transcribes as the session happens, each speaker kept apart, so you are never half-listening and half-writing. Now and then, quietly, it offers one small observation: a thread worth pulling, a shift in the room. Take it or leave it. Your attention stays where it belongs, on the person in the chair.
The long thread across every session The work moves slowly, and the meaning lives in the slowness. Freudche follows each patient's story over weeks and months: where it is heading, what keeps coming back, what you might pick up next time. The arc that used to surface only after a dozen sessions is in front of you from the third.
The people in your patient's story Patients rarely come alone. They bring a mother, a manager, an ex, the friend who calls at midnight. Freudche tracks who keeps appearing, how close they sit, how the charge around each one rises and falls across sessions. You see the cast of the inner story laid out, and the week a relationship starts to turn.
An assistant that has read the whole file In the thick of a busy week, you can ask Freudche about a case the way you would ask a colleague — one who somehow remembered everything. What did we cover about her father? When did the avoidance start? It answers from the sessions, with the quote it is leaning on, so you can check the source. It points. You decide what it means.
Insights grounded in the work you actually do Freudche reads each session through the lens you practice in: psychodynamic, CBT, schema therapy, ACT, internal family systems, attachment, and more. The patterns it surfaces speak your language, with the moment in the transcript that prompted them. Not a generic readout. The frame you already think in.
For couples, the thing between them A couple session has a third patient in the room: whatever happens in the space between two people. Freudche follows that, grounded in the Gottman method. The bids that get missed. The repair that lands, or doesn't. The contempt that slips in under the words. You see how the conversation actually moved, so the hard moment becomes one you can return to together.
Notes that meet you halfway The unpaid hour after the patient leaves, the one you spend writing notes, Freudche gives it back. It can draft a note in the clinical format you keep, then read your own version against the session and tell you, plainly, what slipped past you. SOAP, DAP, intake, treatment plan, whatever your practice runs on. You write. It watches your blind spot.
How the hour actually moved How much did you talk, and how much did they? Open questions or closed ones? The silences, were they yours or theirs? Freudche lays out the shape of the conversation as plain observation: no score, no verdict. A quiet mirror for the part of the work you can never see while you are inside it.