The Freudche Story

Reza Khosravivala has studied psychology for as long as he can remember. For years he also sat on the other side of it: in therapy himself, week after week, talking about the weather. It wasn't going anywhere. The therapy wasn't bad. It just wasn't moving.

The problem isn't the therapist

One good clinician sees six patients a day, an hour each. The thread that matters, the pattern running quietly under everything, usually surfaces around session 18 or 20. Sometimes never. Why so late? Not for lack of skill or care. No single human, at minute 37 of the fifth session of the day, can hold every thread at once. That's a human limit, not a skill failure.

Why Freudche exists

So Reza studied it all himself until his own therapy started to move. Then he built Freudche, so no one else has to do what he did to make their therapy work.

What it does

Freudche is a second pair of eyes that reads back over the notes you already wrote and points, quietly, to the pattern that's been forming since session two. It doesn't get tired at minute 37. It doesn't drift to the next patient. What was said three weeks ago, it still holds. You stay the clinician: every observation is yours to take or leave.

The point

Not faster therapy. Sharper therapy. Not a tool that replaces what only you can do, but one that gives back the attention the paperwork keeps stealing, so you can be there for every patient as if they were your only one.

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