Narrative Therapy

Katrine Barington

A journey through your histories

Narrative therapy is about asking questions that help you not only understand the challenges you are facing, but especially to find meanings in the life you have lived and the life you are creating. I am not the expert who will fix your life, handing you solutions or coping strategies. Instead, I come with the belief that even the actions that seem pointless or confusing had important reasons behind them—reasons we will unfold together for you to regain control over your life. If you choose to take this narrative journey with me, change will grow from inviting in new perspectives on your own history and healing will follow.

We all have a reason for going where we go.
What brought you here?

These are some of the reasons why other people crossed paths with me.

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Trauma

When the past becomes the present, we become hostage of what has happened to us and life stands still, playing on repeat.

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Abuse

When abuse becomes part of our lives, we might get confused, experience guilt and even doubt if we are the abuser. 

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Relationship

Love. Friendship. Family. Work. The connection with others is everything. When it breaks, it can be devastating. 

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Isolation

When moving becomes uprooting, our sense of belonging is lost and we start missing not only home, but ourselves.

About me

I am a Danish psychologist specialized in narrative therapy. I graduated from Copenhagen university in 2015 and have since worked with a great variety of clients and problems, from family therapy to work psychology. In addition to my therapeutic work, I am a manager at Solvita, our sister company offering social and psychological services in all of Denmark.


I offer online therapy in Danish and English. I can work with clients within the EU and throughout most of the world, except for the US and Canada.

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quotes

“I'm vitally interested in history. I think that the opportunity to identify the real effects of certain ways of being and of thinking on persons' lives and relationships, is very important. To do this we need critical reflection, and for critical reflection we need history.”

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Michael White