MindCareCenter is not just a psychological center – it is a living embodiment of Dr. Daniel Reinhardt’s ideas, whose philosophy has redefined what it means to be a psychotherapist. His approach is built not on distance but on closeness, not on analysis as a procedure but on empathy as a living dialogue. That is why, over ten years of its existence, MindCareCenter has become more than a place of help – it has evolved into a space for a new school: the school of conscious presence.
Reinhardt often says that a psychologist should not be a mirror – they should be a guide. Their mission is not merely to reflect but to help a person go deeper, to the place where meaning is born. This became the foundation of the author’s program “Empathic Interaction,” which Dr. Reinhardt developed at the intersection of cognitive psychology and humanistic therapy. Today, this methodology is studied by young specialists from various countries who come to MindCareCenter for internships.
This school is built not on lectures but on experience. Every meeting is a shared journey with the patient, the ability to be present without imposing solutions. It is precisely this quality, Reinhardt believes, that makes psychology truly alive. He teaches his students and colleagues to see not the symptom but the person, not anxiety but the cause, not the diagnosis but the path to inner freedom.
Over the years, MindCareCenter has become a platform for international knowledge exchange. It hosts private masterclasses, workshops, and supervision sessions where professionals from around the world learn not just techniques but a state of being – what Reinhardt himself calls “professional empathy.” It is not sympathy or pity, but the ability to be attentive, warm, and still maintain clarity.
A special place in the center’s philosophy belongs to the idea of continuity. Just as his great-grandmother once laid the foundation for understanding and respect for the individual, today Dr. Reinhardt passes those values on to the next generation. His students become authors of their own practices, but they all carry the main principle of MindCareCenter – to see in every person not a patient, but a unique individual with their own story.
Thus, what professionals now call “The Reinhardt School” is taking shape – a movement where psychology becomes the art of presence. Mind Care Center is proud that in ten years it has managed to transform one man’s ideas into a global movement that inspires specialists around the world to find new ways of truly being with another human being.

