TRAINING

The Psychology of War — For Those Who Are in It

Programs for psychologists, psychotherapists, and anyone who works with service members, veterans, and their families.

The experience we are gaining today in working with military personnel—in hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and alongside those who are starting from scratch—represents a unique clinical reality. And we are turning it into training programs for specialists

The war raises new clinical questions

How do you talk to someone who has seen things they can never forget? How do you work with someone who has returned alive—but feels dead inside? How do you help a family that is waiting, no longer knowing who to expect? The answers to these questions cannot be found in textbooks. They are shaped by clinical experience—here, now, in direct contact with soldiers and their loved ones.

It is precisely this experience that forms the foundation of our programs.

A psychologist who works with military personnel cannot afford not to understand war. You don’t necessarily have to be there. But you must know what happens to a person when they go there—and when they return.

Programs for Professionals

01 / War will not erase

Author’s Course · 3 months · For psychologists and psychotherapists

A comprehensive course covering three areas: military, clinical, and transgenerational psychology. 48 hours of lectures, group therapy, and supervision. Three cohorts starting in 2022—each taking place during the actual war.

Learn more about the course history and reviews.

02 / Moral and psychological preparation

Intensive Course · For Psychologists in Law Enforcement and Military Units

Psychological preparation for combat: stress management, fear management, team cohesion, psychological resilience in extreme conditions.

03 / Almost zero

For Military Personnel · Psychological Support Course

This program is designed for service members themselves—not for those who treat them. It covers how to take care of yourself in combat situations, recognize your own emotional states, and find support.

 

04 / What’s wrong with him?

For military spouses · A joint lecture by a psychologist and a sexologist

For those who are waiting and don’t understand what’s happening to their soldier. How to read his condition, how to speak, how to be there for him – and not collapse yourself.

We’re open to collaboration!

Corporate training: programs for psychological services, medical institutions, and military organizations. University partnerships: integration of VPI programs into curricula. Supervision and counseling: for organizations working with trauma.

We have been working throughout the war — and we will continue to do so afterward.
Join us.

For inquiries regarding cooperation:
warpsychotrauma@gmail.com 
+380 68 95 92 911

About mental health during and after the war (in Ukrainian, but you can use Telegram’s translator):