For experienced coaches ready to work with the deeper, more complex layers of the coaching relationship.
You understand the foundations.
You know your defences, dynamics and unconscious processes.
Now you’re ready to go further – into the subtleties, tensions and transformative potential of psychodynamic work.
Advanced & Applied Psychodynamics is where theory becomes practice.
Where insight becomes application.
And where coaching becomes richer, braver and more psychologically literate.
This module is designed for coaches who want to use psychodynamics well, not just understand it intellectually. It is stretching, rigorous, and deeply supportive – the kind of space where powerful work can unfold.
Module Focus: Transference
The relational force you’re already experiencing – now explored with depth and skill.
Transference is one of the most influential, misunderstood, and quietly powerful dynamics in any relational space – including coaching.
Across this module, you’ll learn how to recognise it, work with it, and stay steady when it emerges, without getting caught in the process yourself.
Over three weeks, plus a follow-up session, you’ll explore:
- how transference forms and why it matters in coaching
- how to spot it when it shows up (and it always does)
- common relational patterns clients bring into sessions
- how to respond skilfully, ethically and confidently
- how your own countertransference shapes the work
You’ll also engage with a range of theorists – recognising which voices you resonate with and why.
How the Module Works
Each weekly session offers a blend of theory, casework and reflective practice:
Hour 1: Theory
A deep dive into transference from a psychodynamic perspective: origins, development, and relevance to coaching practice. You’ll explore different theoretical lenses and identify the ones that speak most strongly to your own way of working.
Hour 2: Case Study
A written case example (created by Julia) grounds the concepts in real coaching practice. Together, we’ll analyse what’s happening beneath the surface and what it means for your interventions.
Hour 3: Group Supervision
Bring your own reflections, challenges or questions for discussion. This is where the learning becomes personal: what you’re noticing, what’s emerging, and how this plays out with your clients.
Follow-Up Session (2 weeks later)
Coaches often find the biggest insights land after the module ends. This 2-hour follow-up is a space to reflect on what has surfaced, what has shifted, and what still wants attention.
Dates & Times: January–March 2026 Cohort
All sessions take place live on Zoom, on Wednesdays:
- 28 January: 6pm–9pm (UK)
- 4 February: 6pm–9pm (UK)
- 11 February: 6pm–9pm (UK)
- 4 March: 6pm–8pm (UK) (Follow-up)
What Else Is Included
Alongside the teaching and supervision space, you’ll receive:
- curated reading and resources to take your learning deeper
- a psychologically safe, stretching environment designed for real exploration
- practical tools for applying psychodynamics ethically and effectively
- real examples, not abstract theory
- recordings available (with group agreement)
Accreditation
This module has been accredited with 12.5 ICF CCE units (9 Core Competency and 3.5 Resource Development)
Entry Requirements
To join, you must have completed:
- Essential Psychodynamics for Coaches, or
- equivalent psychodynamic training or experience
This programme is designed for practicing coaches who are ready to deepen and stretch their work.
Investment
Standard Price: £250 per module
How to Join
Prefer to talk first?
You can book a 30-minute introductory call:
Or email Julia directly: julia@dynamicsofeveryday.life
Is This the Right Next Step for You?
Advanced & Applied Psychodynamics is ideal if you are:
- ready to deepen your psychological understanding
- comfortable working with complexity
- wanting to integrate unconscious processes into your coaching
- craving a space that stretches you professionally
- drawn to the relational, emotional and symbolic layers in coaching
This is sophisticated work, and the development coaches often say they wish they’d done years earlier.
