Vlado Solc
Certified AnalystMS, LCPC, CSAC, Diplomate (Jung Institute Chicago)
Glendale, WI, United States
About
Vlado Šolc is a professional Jungian psychotherapist based in Glendale, Wisconsin, holding credentials as an MS, LCPC, CSAC, and Diplomate of the Jung Institute Chicago. He treats depression, anxiety, family conflicts, and a range of other emotional difficulties, with particular focus on psycho-spiritual crises such as loss of meaning and direction, mind–body connection and psychosomatic issues, immigration and cultural challenges including displacement and grief, and women's empowerment and emancipation. His specialties further include the treatment of addictions and providing individual psychotherapy for adults and youth.
Vlado's therapeutic approach is integrative and depth-oriented, rooted in Jungian analysis — a mode of psychotherapy where analyst and analysand work together to deepen the patient's insight, increase the conscious field, and achieve a sense of harmony and relief of symptoms while finding meaning in psychological suffering. He employs dream analysis, active imagination, creative art, and other techniques designed to utilize the natural self-healing potential of the psyche. He conceptualizes his work through three treatment paradigms — Physician-Healer, Philosopher-Scientist, and Spiritual Healer-Hierophant — united by an overarching Acceptance-Love Archetype representing wholeness.
Czech-born and multilingual, Vlado brings a rich cross-cultural perspective to his practice. He is the author of five published books on depth psychology, including 'Dark Religion' and 'Democracy and Individuation,' and has contributed to the field through education, training, supervision, and consultation. He currently offers therapy in person, via Zoom, and by phone.
Details
Education & Training
- Diplomate, Jung Institute Chicago
- Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor (LCPC)
- Certified Substance Abuse Counselor (CSAC)
Best for
- Meaning crises
- Cultural displacement
- Spiritual emergencies
- Immigration psychology