I play Ranji Trophy cricket. A few months ago, I was really struggling. I was newly married, not in form, and under a lot of pressure – from the team, family, and myself. I couldn’t sleep, was always stressed, and things were not good even at home.
That’s when I started sessions with Sneha. I’ve never met her in person. Everything was online. Still, she helped me a lot.
She listened without judging, and slowly helped me understand what was going on in my mind. She gave me simple tools to handle pressure, stay calm, and focus again. I started sleeping better and enjoying cricket again. Things also got better with my wife.
Honestly, I didn’t think online sessions could help this much, but they really did. Sneha made a big difference in my life. I’m very thankful, and I would recommend her to anyone going through a tough time.
I never believed in psychologists. In my profession, we are trained to stay strong, no matter what. I always thought, yen madodu? adjust agbeku (what to do? have to adjust). I was scared to open up. I thought I’ll be judged or questioned—especially because I have always come across as strong.
But a close friend told me how therapy actually helped him. That’s when I got in touch with Sneha. I was nervous in the beginning, but she made me feel safe.
She never forced me to speak. Slowly, I opened up. She helped me understand that it’s okay to not be okay. Her approach was simple, real, and not bookish. No big talk—just small changes in thinking and daily routine.
I started feeling lighter. Less angry, less restless. Manassu swalpa shanthavaytu (my mind became a bit peaceful).
In my world, you’re expected to look perfect, smile on cue, post happy stories—and hide the rest. But behind the makeup and camera, I was falling apart. I couldn’t sleep, I felt anxious all the time, and I had started drinking “just to unwind.” But it wasn’t just a drink anymore – I was close to slipping into addiction.
A close friend finally said, “Please talk to someone before this gets worse.” I said the usual: “Main thik hoon yaar, just stressed.” But I wasn’t.
I started sessions with Sneha – online. She mentioned something called psychodrama-integrated therapy. I literally Googled it while still on the call. I thought, Is she going to make me act out my childhood or something? I almost laughed – but I stayed.
And I’m so glad I did.
Her way of working is gentle but powerful. I felt seen, not judged. Slowly, I started healing—for real.
Sneha helped me return to myself.
Sneha Latha Jain has been a game-changer in my life.
Her guidance, support, and expertise have helped me navigate through difficult path and turned into Life from being stagnated to Re-Inventing life.
With her help, I’ve gained a newfound understanding of myself and developed new strategies that have improved my mental well-being. The compassion, empathy, and non-judgmental approach created a safe space for me to open up and work through my struggles.
Thanks to Sneha Latha Jain, I’ve been given a second chance at life. I’m forever grateful for impact on my journey towards healing, growth, and self-discovery.
Therapy with Sneha (3 years now and continuing) has been a significant enabler in my healing and growth journey. Key things about Sneha that work well for me: 1) She accommodates, incorporates & matches my spiritual & philosophical conversations within therapy (because she is herself knowledgeable and interested in both). 2) Her wisdom in both handholding and empowering me. 3) Her professionalism and compassion. During sessions, she is sensitive to the specific state I’m in, and evolves accordingly, holding space and not rushing.
She doesn’t shy away from challenging me when needed, doing so very respectfully. And finally, she models respect & self-care, holding clients accountable with no-nonsense expectation.
There are very few people who can sit with you in your chaos without trying to fix or rush it—but Sneha does exactly that. She has this way of making you see things as they are, without judgment, without sugarcoating, yet with so much empathy that even the hardest truths feel grounding instead of crushing.
Therapy with her isn’t just about ‘healing’ – it’s about understanding, unlearning, and growing into someone who can face life with clarity and resilience. If you’re struggling, stuck, or simply seeking depth, her approach is the kind that doesn’t just help—you carry it with you long after.
I am a therapy sceptic and I have kept up with Sneha for almost 2 years. She has humanized the transactional nature of therapy for me even as I sort out my reservations about the idea of therapy. I haven’t let her go because she doesn’t make it easy to just leave – there always ends up being a reason to stay, to stick with her and to trust that I have someone worth my while to speak to. Sneha defies the stereotype of how a therapist typically might come across, in a way that allows me to engage in dialogue rather than present my case for prescription. She isn’t prescriptive at all. And she is unconventionally generous with her time. She is bluntly forthcoming with questions that challenge my thinking and funnily, this has only served to up my comfort level with her over time – it has allowed me to be stubborn and argue, not proper and filtered (which defeats the whole purpose of therapy). There is space held for me to be. Sneha also talks a lot more than the standard therapist. She opens up with resonant life events and shares unreservedly. This has been unfamiliar in my conception of therapy – more than anything else, it’s been refreshing. She then proceeds to laugh at my recount of incidents, much to my indignation, before explaining her take, which, frankly, is often insightful and prompts me to reassess my situation healthily. I have had breakthroughs with Sneha more than once and she is an important support structure in my life as I navigate through. I am grateful for her and also actually quite fond of her (which she’ll probably tease me about, so there).
As a budding film director in the USA, my life felt like a constant battle between ambition and self-doubt. The pressure to prove myself, the fear of failure, and the emotional rollercoaster of the creative process had taken a serious toll on my mental health. I was stuck trapped in cycles of overthinking, procrastination, and self-sabotage until I found Sneha Latha.
From our very first session, I knew she was different. Sneha doesn’t just listen; she deciphers you. She helped me confront the fears I had buried, break free from perfectionism, and understand my own emotional triggers with a level of clarity I had never experienced before.
But beyond her expertise, Sneha is simply real. She doesn’t sugarcoat, but she also doesn’t judge. She challenges you in a way that makes you feel seen, not criticized. She creates a space where healing happens not through surface-level positivity, but through deep, uncomfortable, and ultimately liberating self-awareness.
Because of her, I no longer second-guess my instincts or let fear dictate my path. I have found my voice not just as a filmmaker, but as a person. Sneha Latha is more than a therapist; she is a game-changer. If you’re in demanding industry and struggling with self-doubt, anxiety, or the emotional weight of this industry, she is the person you need in your corner.
As an author and PhD scholar in Australia, I had always prided myself on being logical, analytical, and driven. But what I didn’t realize was that I was using my intellect to outrun my emotions. I was drowning in self-doubt, constantly questioning if I was good enough, if my work mattered, if I even deserved the success I had. The worst part? No one around me could tell. To the world, I was accomplished. Inside, I was crumbling. Then I met Sneha Latha. From our very first session, I felt something I hadn’t felt in years—seen. I remember telling her, almost apologetically, “I know my problems aren’t that big. Other people have it worse.” She stopped me right there. She looked at me and said, “Pain isn’t a competition.” That one sentence hit me harder than anything I had read in my years of research. Sneha has a way of getting to the root of things without making it feel clinical. She didn’t just offer solutions—she guided me through why I was feeling the way I was. Through Gestalt therapy, she helped me notice patterns I had been blind to. I remember an exercise where she asked me to talk to myself as if I were speaking to a friend. It was uncomfortable at first, but then I realized just how harsh I had been on myself for years. That was a turning point. She also introduced creative approaches that, to my surprise, resonated deeply. One day, when I was feeling particularly stuck in my writing, she encouraged me to use free association and art therapy—something I would have dismissed before as “not my thing.” But as I let go of my rigid thinking, I started seeing the underlying fears that were holding me back. It wasn’t just writer’s block—it was fear of failure, of not living up to expectations, of being “found out” as an imposter.
What truly sets Sneha apart is her presence. She doesn’t just listen—she hears you. She doesn’t just advise – she understands. When I spiraled into overthinking, she gently brought me back. When I couldn’t see past my own self-criticism, she held up a mirror that showed me a different perspective. She never forced solutions on me; she helped me find them within myself.
Now, I write with more freedom. I don’t let self-doubt control me. I still have moments of overthinking, but they no longer define me. The biggest shift? I’ve stopped treating my emotions as obstacles to overcome and started seeing them as part of the journey. If you’re a thinker, a perfectionist, or someone who feels trapped in their own mind, Sneha is the person who will help you find the way out. She didn’t just change my thinking – she changed my life.
I first spoke to Sneha to explore how my mom might be nudged to consider therapy (mom was battling grief from big life changes and loss of a loved one). Sneha spent around 45 mins on the phone with me, just trying to understand, and the way she centred my mom’s perspective on the call – felt like a slap on my face (a daughter trying to “fix” her mom). I knew then how even when my mom was not her “client”, her capacity for empathy was truthful, challenging and gentle at the same time – a rare rare quality that is unfortunately absent among many therapists that I know. My mom could not be convinced, but almost 6 months later, I encountered a personal crisis of my own – and I reached out to Sneha. That was the beginning of the most intense journey for me – one of inner healing – it was extremely challenging but also one with deep, meaningful and long lasting shifts (both within and in my life circumstances).
I write this also because I have sought therapy with 4 other therapists & counsellors before I met Sneha. Most therapists get so caught up with being “professional” that the part about being human first is often ignored. Moreover, I had been shamed by some of the therapists before, causing deeper wounding. Sneha had to undo not just the traumas of my own life experiences, but also retraumatization from these experiences. Sneha’s methods are unconventional, but they are catered to the specific needs of each person in need, and she has a lot of eclectic tools. She presents as human always (not an expert), which makes engaging with her very easy and without hierarchy. She has a deep reverance for the humanity of every person, Therefore the therapeutic relationship is also built on a foundation of mutual respect abd reciprocity. She is always available – for any emergency – because much of the work of processing happens in-between sessions. Her training in psychology and years of experience, are deepened by a strong grounding in philosophy which I believe is the primary reason I experienced deep and everlasting shifts.
I have journeyed with her for 4 years now, with brief breaks in between. Whether as a therapst or not, I am safe in knowing that she has got my back. In my job as a teacher and coordinator for a youth wellness centre, I have encountered many professionals in the fields of psychology – but I would refer anyone with full faith – to Sneha! Thank you for the work you do!
As a professor living in London, 2020 was supposed to be another year of research, teaching, and intellectual pursuits. Instead, it became the year I nearly lost myself. The relentless stress of shifting to online education, the isolation of lockdowns, and the growing anxiety about an uncertain future left me mentally exhausted. I had always prided myself on my ability to stay composed, but by mid-year, I felt like I was living in survival mode barely functioning, constantly overthinking, and unable to find joy in anything. That’s when I decided to seek therapy with Sneha. From our very first session, Sneha’s presence was grounding. I remember rambling about my workload, my students’ struggles, and my guilt over not being “productive enough” during lockdown. She let me speak, then gently asked, “And where do you fit into all of this?” That question stopped me in my tracks. I had been so consumed with external pressures that I hadn’t even considered my own well-being. One of the most impactful exercises she introduced me to was thought reframing. I had fallen into the habit of catastrophizing believing that if I didn’t meet every expectation, I was failing. Sneha helped me break this cycle. In one session, she asked me to list all the times in my career when things hadn’t gone as planned but still worked out. Seeing those moments on paper was a revelation. It was the first time I acknowledged that imperfection wasn’t the enemy it was part of the process. Another breakthrough moment came when she guided me through a visualization exercise. I had been struggling with overwhelming self-doubt about my work, feeling like I was falling behind. She asked me to picture my younger selfthe version of me who first fell in love with academia and speak to him. At first, it felt odd, but soon, I found myself reassuring that younger version: You don’t need to have all the answers right now. You’re doing your best, and that’s enough. The realization that I could offer myself the same kindness I gave my students was incredibly freeing. Perhaps the most powerful change came in how I approached my emotions. Sneha taught me to stop intellectualizing everything, to sit with discomfort instead of trying to reason my way out of it. One day, after a particularly tough session, she simply said, “Not everything needs a solution today. Sometimes, things just need space.” That lesson alone reshaped the way I dealt with stress and uncertainty. By the time I completed therapy, I was no longer just managing I was living again and truly alive. My work no longer felt like an impossible burden, and I had learned to set boundaries that protected my mental well-being. More than anything, I walked away with a sense of self-compassion I had never given myself before. If you are a professor, academic, or someone who carries the weight of expectations whether external or self-imposed. I cannot recommend Sneha enough. She didn’t just help me cope with 2020. She helped me rediscover the person I had been neglecting me.
Sneha brings a calm and reassuring presence to all our sessions. She listens attentively and has an uncanny ability to recall things I have said but forgotten. With grace and kindness, she guides me to view things from different perspectives. I find our sessions very helpful.


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