Across New York and the wider United States, spiritual approaches are appearing alongside clinical care. High-end Manhattan clinics now mix meditation, breath work, and guided ketamine experiences with spiritual language. Apps and directories are doing the same.
Why this matters today: nearly nine in 10 Americans hold at least one new-age belief, and Psychology Today lists spirituality-focused providers in many states. Consumers are logging on to apps that promise meaningful conversations and guidance.
In this article we will show who is offering these services, how platforms and clinics present them, and why mental health directories reflect rising interest. We aim to help people sort marketing from credible care.
Expect clear reporting on where spiritual language meets clinical practice, the ethics debates, and practical tips for finding help that fits your needs.
Key Takeaways
- Spiritual modalities are moving into mainstream care and consumer apps.
- Listings on Psychology Today mirror growing interest nationwide.
- We will map providers, platforms, and ethical concerns for readers.
- Learn how to evaluate claims and spot transparent services.
- Compare new offerings with established mental health norms.
- Find practical guidance and vetted resources, including how some become paid advisers via sites like paid adviser programs.
Inside the rise of psychic therapy in the United States
In cities from Manhattan to Boulder, language about energy and intuition now appears in places it once did not.

From upscale clinics to neighborhood practices, therapists and readers sometimes work in the same blocks. Manhattan clinics have added spiritual phrasing to service pages. In Boulder, licensed counselor Xandra Hawes runs separate sites for clinical work and for readings to keep roles distinct.
From Manhattan clinics to Boulder practices
Over the past year, platforms shed their hotline image. Sites like Keen and Kasamba now use softer branding and friendly word choices to appeal to clients seeking comfort today.
Gen Z anxiety, pandemic shifts, and the search for faster answers
In 2020 demand jumped as people sought clarity during the pandemic. Many mediums reported more bookings while therapists logged rising interest from younger people.
A recent survey found about 60% of Gen Z reported having an anxiety disorder. Some young clients told reporters they prefer quicker, direct answers from mediums over weekly clinical visits.
- Marketing change: Language shifted from neon signs to calm, reassuring copy.
- Client appeal: People want one point of contact for talk and intuitive guidance.
- Practitioner caution: Experienced providers stress pace, process, and fit over quick fixes.
| Setting | Typical Offerings | Client Appeal | Boundary Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manhattan clinics | Mindfulness, guided experiences, spiritual language in descriptions | Credibility, convenience | Separate intake for clinical care |
| Boulder practices | Licensed counseling; separate reading services | Local trust, blended interests | Two-website model (clinical vs. readings) |
| Platforms (Keen, Kasamba) | Advisers, readings, friendly branding | Quick access, approachable tone | Clear service descriptions and pricing |
For readers exploring this space, note that transparency and clear boundaries often predict better outcomes than promises of fast answers.
Learn more about how people become paid advisers and phone-based readers on this guide to becoming a telephone adviser.
Psychic therapy
People seeking insight can book a reading, an energy session, or a hybrid consultation—each offers a different promise.
What the term covers
Psychic therapy is an umbrella label. It may include psychic readings, energy work, or psychospiritual counseling. Offerings vary by practitioner and by platform.

How practitioners explain outcomes
In psychology terms, explanations differ. Some frame impressions as intuition. Others describe spiritual sources or symbolic experience.
Readings often address love, career direction, grief support, or growth. They can feel directive: a reader may offer specific impressions or next-steps. That contrasts with clinical models that favor collaborative questions and exploration.
What energy work and scope mean
Energy work is usually described as shifting attention and sensation. Many clients find it calming. Standards and evidence differ from mainstream psychology, and it is not a substitute for medical or mental health treatment.
| Service | Typical Focus | Client Expectation | When to seek clinical care |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychic readings | Impressions, symbols, guidance | Quick answers, insight | Risk of crisis, suicidal thoughts |
| Energy work | Sensation, attention shifts, relaxation | Calming, embodied experience | Severe anxiety or untreated medical issues |
| Psychospiritual counseling | Meaning-making, life transitions | Integrated support over sessions | Diagnosis-driven treatment needs |
Practical tips: Ask providers about boundaries, follow-up, and qualifications. If you want sustained clinical care, prioritize licensed treatment. For insight or comfort, a reading or energy session may fit—just know what you are buying.
Learn more about training paths and how advisers list services on directories with this guide: how to become a psychic healer.
Who’s offering these services? Therapists, mediums, and hybrids
A growing mix of licensed clinicians, intuitive readers, and hybrids now market services that blend clinical methods with spiritual language.

Profiles in practice: the “psychic psychologist,” intuition schools, and New York training hubs
Amanda Charles calls herself the “psychic psychologist.” She is a Chartered Counselling psychologist (BPS; HCPC-registered) with MBCT from Oxford, EMDR, EFT, NLP, and decades of experiences combining intuition and skill.
Betsy LeFae runs Trust Yourself: Intuition School, and the Helix Training Program in New York offers psychospiritual training for those who want formal pathways. Ashley Torrent provides psychospiritual counseling focused on meaning and care.
“Ask before sharing impressions,” many practitioners say, stressing consent and clear boundaries.
Two-website model: licensed counselor by day, readings by appointment
Some providers keep two sites. Xandra Hawes in Boulder separates clinical practice from medium sessions. This helps clients know what kind of session to expect and preserves scope.
| Profile | Typical Offerings | Client Expectation |
|---|---|---|
| Licensed clinician (e.g., Amanda Charles) | MBCT, EMDR, integrative consults | Named skills, billed as clinical care |
| Intuition schools (Trust Yourself, Helix) | Workshops, training, certifications | Skill development, peer supervision |
| Hybrid practitioners | Readings, psychospiritual sessions | Disclosure up front; informed consent |
- Sessions differ: therapy-style work focuses on process; readings aim for insight.
- Ask about training, supervision, and how services are billed.
- Word-of-mouth often grows practices, so verify credentials before booking.
For readers curious about career paths and listing services, see this guide on becoming a paid adviser: how to become a psychic detective.
Demand, platforms, and the business of readings
Mobile apps have turned on-demand readings into a simple tap, shifting the market from late-night hotlines to polished platforms.

From hotlines to apps
Sites like Kasamba and Keen rebranded advisers as friendly experts. Kasamba uses phrases such as find your path to happiness, while Keen cites millions of conversations as trust signals.
Branding now echoes wellness apps, emphasizing calm support instead of sensational language. This draws clients who want quick comfort on their phones at any time.
How the marketplace works
Profiles, ratings, categories, and chat or call options let users filter by style, price, and availability today. Niche tags cover love, career, and spiritual alignment so users find a match fast.
| Feature | What it shows | Why clients care |
|---|---|---|
| Profiles & bios | Qualifications, specialties, photos | First impression; signals credibility |
| Ratings & reviews | User feedback, star scores | Social proof for large-scale platforms |
| Chat/call options | Instant chat or scheduled calls | On-demand access versus planned time |
Scale claims—14 million satisfied customers or tens of millions of conversations—act as social proof in a world where size signals trust. Yet quality varies by adviser and service.
Apps favor immediacy; users expect quick, actionable answers rather than slow, exploratory care. That shapes what clients ask for and what advisers offer.
Practical vetting tips: read multiple reviews, check refund policies, and start with short sessions. For those looking into becoming a guide, see how to become an adviser.
“Marketing words like ‘meaningful conversations’ and ‘path to happiness’ are appealing, but clarity about methods and limits matters more than comforting copy.”
Boundaries and ethics: where therapy ends and mediumship begins
Clear roles protect clients and preserve trust. When a provider mixes clinical work with readings, the line between treatment and other services can blur. That confusion affects fees, consent, and expectations.
Informed consent, client expectations, and conflicts of interest
Clients deserve a plain explanation of services, fees, and limits before any session starts. Dr. Brandon S. Hamm and others warn about financial conflicts when a therapist sells add-ons that resemble clinical care.

Mainstream concerns: financial motives, harm risk, and professional codes
Professional codes prioritize client welfare. Dual relationships and upselling can create conflicts of interest. A noted case where a clinician hid a separate medium site shows how nondisclosure erodes trust today.
When lines blur: direction-giving vs. therapeutic questioning
Therapists are trained to ask guiding questions and support exploration. Others may give direct instructions or specific steps. That difference matters when a client seeks concrete answers rather than reflective work.
- Why clarity matters: clients must get an upfront explanation of role, scope, and billing.
- Safe practices: separate websites, separate scheduling, and clear language about scope.
- Ask these questions: How will advice be handled? What if guidance conflicts with treatment? Who refers to clinical care?
Practical takeaway: Look for disclosure in listings (including Psychology Today) and insist on written consent if services cross roles. If a provider offers both, a safe way forward is documented boundaries and separate appointments so a client always knows the way a session will proceed.
For readers exploring development paths and clear role-setting, see this concise guide on mystic skills and practice.
Evidence and skepticism: psychology today versus love magic then and now
Ancient warnings about love charms still echo in modern debates over quick fixes for relationships. Ovid’s Remedies for Love recounts mythic failures—Medea and Circe show spells do not reliably change hearts. Those stories frame a timeless caution: promises of certainty around love often collapse.

Ovid’s critique and modern echoes
Ovid and later commentators warn that coercive “love magic” raises ethical problems and false hope. Today, some services suggest quick resolution for love, but critics point out the risks to autonomy and consent.
What research supports
By contrast, structured approaches like MBCT and established psychotherapy offer replicable training and protocols. MBCT, endorsed by NICE (2004; priority 2009), cut relapse for recurrent depression by about 50% in trials and helps anxiety, stress, and trauma over years.
“Prefer approaches that can be tested and refined over time,”
Practical takeaway: Psychology Today listings reflect a wide world of offerings, but evidence-based methods show clearer outcomes and verified training. Ask what evidence exists, how training is checked, and whether claimed results respect health and autonomy.
For a related look at scientific claims, see this analysis on the law of attraction: is the law of attraction scientific.
Conclusion
Conclusion
As options multiply, choosing the right mix of energy work, readings, and psychotherapy matters more than ever.
People should match goals to method. For depression, anxiety, or a chronic disorder, pick evidence-based treatment with a licensed psychologist or therapist. For short-term meaning or comfort, a reading or energy session may fit.
Ask providers for a clear explanation of scope, separate sessions and billing, training, and referral plans. Insist on informed consent and check policies in plain words before you book.
Smart choices start with good questions: review credentials, read policies, and confirm supervision so your health and healing stay central.