Psychotherapy and Dreamwork

I am a psychotherapist and dreamworker based in Copenhagen, Denmark.

I offer psychotherapy based on dreamwork, IFS and conscious dialog focusing on emotions, inner resources, and potentials for development.

I work with an open, non-judging approach to people regardless of background and issues. I draw on many different methods, but particularly take my starting point in dreamwork, mindful awareness, therapeutic drawing, and “parts work” based on Internal Family Systems (IFS).

I am a member of the Danish Psychotherapist Association (MPF) and trained at the Vedfelt Institute in Denmark, where I also teach and supervise. I have worked as a therapist since 2010.

I have also completed training in MDMA Assisted Psychotherapty at MAPS (Multi Disciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies). And I have recently completed IFS Level 2 training.

I have clinics in Østerbro, Copenhagen and in Espergærde (Both Denmark) but also see clients online.

Contact me at +45 22670830 or anders@vogt.dk if you have questions or want to book an appointment.

Dreamwork

Dreams want something from us. They speak from a deeper place within us, one that is in touch with all that which is still waiting to unfold.

When we look closely at dreams, it becomes clear that they deal with all the things that are important to us. They see our wishes and worries, what we strive for and what limits us. But more importantly, dreams provide insight into developmental potentials and resources that we often did not know we had. Being in touch with our dreams is in a way to be in contact with our soul. As Freud, Jung, and many after them have shown, dreams can be important guides in to our inner life and our journeys of development.

I am very inspired by James Hillman, Jungian analyst and founder of Archetypal Psychology. Hillman maintained that in dreamwork one should “stick with the image” — that is, try to experience the dream as directly as possible and relate to its content without interpreting or psychologizing too much. It is more important to feel what the dream does to us, and what it wants from us, than it is to try to understand “what it means.”

Psychedelic therapy, preparation, and integration

We find ourselves in the midst of a psychedelic renaissance, where the world is rediscovering the therapeutic potential of psychedelic substances such as psilocybin, ayahuasca, LSD, ketamine, and MDMA. Distinguished institutions like King’s College, Johns Hopkins University, and Rigshospitalet (Denmark’s national hospital) are now researching the use of psychedelic substances for, among other things, depression, OCD, post-traumatic stress, alcoholism, and much more.

Meanwhile, many ordinary people are exploring the healing potentials of these substances on their own — for example, to pursue psychological development or to work through traumas and problems that are difficult to address in other ways.

From the beginning of my career, I have worked with clients who use psychedelics, and today I help people with the preparation, support, and integration of psychedelic processes.

I work psychotherapeutically with treating the issues that can arise when using psychedelic substances, and with supporting the natural healing processes they can set in motion. I do this through, among other things, mindfulness training, dreamwork, IFS, and ordinary talk therapy.

I have completed training with MAPS (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies) in MDMA-assisted psychotherapy (New York 2022 and Iceland 2023) and I am currently undertaking training in Holotropic Breathwork with Grof Transpersonal Training. I also have many years of personal experience in the psychedelic field.

Based on this training and experience, I can help prepare or plan psychedelic therapy sessions, on the condition that the psychedelic sessions themselves take place in locations where it is legal — for example in the Netherlands, where certain forms of psychedelic therapy are now permitted.

Contact me to learn more.

(Please note that psychedelic substances such as MDMA, psilocybin, and LSD remain illegal to use in Denmark.)