Verke Editorial
AI therapy FAQ: 50+ answers to the most-asked questions about AI coaching
Verke Editorial ·
This is the AI therapy FAQ — a single page that aggregates the most-asked questions about AI coaching from across our /learn/ cluster. Eight clusters, fifty-one questions, organized by what people actually want to know: is it safe, how does it compare to human therapy, what does it cost, what is the experience like, who is it for, what modalities are there, how do you get started, and what are the alternatives. Each section ends with a link to the deeper pillar article on that topic.
We built this page because AI therapy is a new category and the questions people ask split into recognizable shapes. If your question is here, you can read just the answer; if it leads to a deeper question, follow the pillar link at the end of each section. Most readers spend a couple of minutes scanning the cluster headings, drop into the two or three sections that map to their actual concerns, and then click through to a coach when the questions stop and the wanting-to-try starts.
A note on the structure: the eight clusters below mirror the eight pillar articles in our /learn/ namespace. Each cluster opens with a one-paragraph framing, includes the six most-asked questions for that pillar, and closes with a link to the deeper article. The page ends with three meta questions about this FAQ itself, a coach CTA, and the standard crisis-resource disclaimer. The whole page is about a fifteen-minute read top-to-bottom, or under a minute per cluster if you only need one or two answers.
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Chat with Judith →Cluster 1 of 8
Safety
Six questions about whether AI coaching is safe — for everyday anxiety, for clinical conditions, for crisis moments, for your data, and for the accuracy of the advice itself. Safety isn't one question; it's four overlapping ones, and each gets a real answer below.
The most common version of this question is the everyday-anxiety version, but the most important version of it is the severity-mismatch version: AI coaching is built for the everyday end of the distress spectrum, and a responsible product helps you recognize when the tool you're using isn't the right tool any more. The answers below address both.
Is AI therapy actually safe for everyday anxiety?
For everyday anxiety, low mood, work stress, or social worry — the kind of distress that doesn’t need clinical care — well-designed AI coaching is reasonably safe and often genuinely useful. Coaching tools have lower stakes than crisis care. Where it matters is knowing when to step up to a human clinician, and a good AI coach helps you draw that line rather than blur it.
Can AI therapy diagnose me?
No — Verke does not diagnose, prescribe, or replace medical care. Diagnosis requires a licensed clinician with full clinical context, formal assessment, and accountability. Verke is coaching: a thinking partner, skill builder, and accountability companion. If you want a diagnostic assessment, see a psychologist or psychiatrist; an AI coach is not the right tool for that job.
What happens if I tell the AI I’m in crisis?
The coach surfaces crisis resources directly — 988 in the US, 116 123 for the UK and EU Samaritans, and findahelpline.com for international directories — and encourages you to connect with a human right away. The AI is not a crisis line. If you’re in immediate danger, please call your local emergency services first.
Is my data really private?
Yes. Verke uses end-to-end encryption (AES-256-GCM for messages, RSA-4096 for key exchange), so the keys for your conversation never leave your device. Verke staff cannot read your conversations even with full server access. We require no email, no phone number, and no payment detail to start a session. SAFE-05 walks through what this means in plain language.
Could the AI give me bad advice?
Sometimes — large language models occasionally fabricate or oversimplify. Verke uses guardrails to catch the obvious risks (medication advice, crisis miscoding, anything that needs a clinician), and routes you to human care when the conversation flags severity. For non-critical guidance, treat AI suggestions like advice from a smart friend: useful starting point, not the final word.
When should I switch to a human therapist?
If you’re experiencing severe depression, suicidal thoughts, panic attacks, active trauma flashbacks, or substance dependence, please see a licensed clinician. AI coaching helps with everyday emotional skill-building and stuckness. Human therapy is the right tool for clinical conditions, medication, insurance, or anything requiring formal documentation.
More on this: Is AI therapy safe? An honest answer for skeptics.
Cluster 2 of 8
AI therapy vs human therapy
Six questions about how AI coaching compares to seeing a licensed therapist — alliance, replacement, between-sessions, cost-difference, and the limits where AI is no longer the right tool. The honest answer: the two are different shapes of help, not different points on one line.
The most surprising answer in this cluster is the alliance one — many users report a real felt-sense of being heard by a coach that knows its own nature. That doesn't make it equivalent to a human relationship; it makes it a different category of useful. Read the answers, and follow the pillar link if you want the full treatment.
Can AI therapy replace a real therapist?
No — and Verke doesn’t claim to. AI coaching is the right tool for everyday emotional skill-building, between-session continuity, and the audiences who can’t access human therapy for reasons of cost, time, shame, or geography. Severity, medication management, complex trauma, and insurance-covered care need a licensed human clinician. The honest answer is that the two are different jobs, not different products competing for the same slot.
Is AI therapy as effective as human therapy?
No peer-reviewed study has shown AI coaching to match licensed therapy across severity levels. For everyday distress — the kind of stuckness, low-grade anxiety, and social worry most people live with — AI coaching is meaningfully helpful for many users. For clinical conditions, it’s a complement, not a substitute. Any product that promises otherwise is overselling, and any review that treats them as interchangeable is underselling both.
Can I bond with an AI coach?
Yes, in a real way. The bond isn’t identical to a human relationship, but the felt experience of being heard, remembered across sessions, and not judged is often present — and for some users it lands very strongly. That bond is doing therapeutic work, even if the mechanism is different from a human alliance. Our supporting article on therapeutic alliance with AI walks through what the felt experience actually looks like.
Is it weird to talk to an AI about my problems?
The first session can feel strange — most people report a little self-consciousness in the opening minutes. By the third session, most users find it natural. The shame-relief of “no human is judging me” lands quickly for many people — particularly anyone who’s struggled to be fully honest in human therapy because of what the other person might think. For that audience, AI coaching often unlocks conversations that human therapy didn’t.
How much cheaper is AI therapy?
Drastically. Verke is $4.99–14.99/month. Human therapy is $100–300 per session in most markets, often weekly. Over a year, the cost difference is roughly 50× to 150×. The right comparison isn’t price alone — it’s “what does each actually get me?” — but for budget-constrained readers, AI coaching genuinely removes a barrier that keeps a lot of people from getting any support at all.
Should I tell my therapist I’m using AI coaching?
Yes. Most therapists are curious, not threatened — some integrate it into the work. The honest conversation usually goes well and protects you from accidental dynamics (leaning on the AI to avoid something in therapy, or vice versa). It also tells the AI you’re in therapy, which lets it calibrate. If your therapist responds defensively to the topic, that’s data about the relationship worth paying attention to.
More on this: AI therapy vs human therapy.
Cluster 3 of 8
Cost
Six questions about what AI coaching actually costs, how that compares to human therapy, what the free vs paid distinction means, and how to afford coaching when you can't afford traditional care. Practical numbers, no hedge-words.
The shortest version: AI coaching at the paid tier costs roughly one-tenth what most human-therapy sessions cost, and it covers more surface (always-on, multiple modalities, no commute). The cluster unpacks how the comparison actually breaks down and where the paid-vs-free split gives different value.
How much does AI therapy cost in 2026?
Entry chatbots are free; specialist AI coaches like Verke are $5–15 per month; premium tiers with voice and expanded memory are $15–20 per month. Compared to human therapy at $100–300 per session, AI is roughly 50× to 150× cheaper monthly. The right comparison isn’t price alone — it’s what each one actually gets you for your specific situation.
Is free AI therapy actually free?
Usually yes for basic features — most free tiers limit memory, voice, specialist coaches, or session length. Some are ad-supported. Read the privacy policy carefully: “free” sometimes means “you’re the product.” A free tier is a reasonable place to start if you want a no-commitment first look, but the limits show up quickly once you’re using the tool seriously.
Why is Verke cheaper than BetterHelp?
They’re different products. BetterHelp connects you with licensed human therapists at $240–400 per month; Verke is AI coaching at $4.99–14.99 per month. Different category, different cost structure, different jobs. AI coaching isn’t a discount version of human therapy — it’s a different tool that fits different moments. See Verke vs. BetterHelp for the full breakdown.
Does Verke offer student or low-income discounts?
Verke Basic at $4.99 per month is already priced for accessibility — that’s less than a single coffee per week. The 7-day trial requires no email and no payment method, so you can fully test the product before committing. For student-specific guidance, see our budget article. If $4.99 is a stretch, the trial plus the free Verke Basic features cover a lot of ground without ongoing cost.
Is AI therapy worth paying for if free options exist?
Depends what you need. Free tiers are good for casual reflection and one-off questions; paid tiers add memory across sessions, voice coaching, specialist depth, and method coherence (CBT, ACT, PDT, CFT, NVC). If you’d use coaching weekly or more, the paid tier usually pays back through depth — the AI remembering the thread you were on last Tuesday is worth a lot more than starting fresh every time.
Will insurance cover AI coaching?
Generally no — coaching is not a billable medical service. Some EAPs (Employee Assistance Programs) cover it as a wellness benefit, so checking with your employer is worth a few minutes. HSA/FSA acceptance varies by administrator. For insurance-covered care, you’ll need a licensed therapist; AI coaching’s pricing model is built around being affordable enough to self-pay rather than around insurance reimbursement.
More on this: AI therapy cost.
Cluster 4 of 8
Inside Verke
Six questions about what the actual product experience feels like — memory, tone, voice mode, the first ten minutes, what Verke does in a hard moment, and what Verke explicitly won't do. The product as designed, not the product as imagined from the outside.
This is the cluster where the "is the AI peppy and over-validating?" question gets answered honestly — Verke's coaches are calibrated to push back when warranted, sit with discomfort rather than dissolve it, and name what they notice. If the inside-experience question is the one you're asking, this cluster is the longest read.
How do I pick which Verke coach to start with?
Match the work to the modality. Anxiety, social confidence, exposure work → Judith (CBT). Burnout, self-criticism, low mood → Amanda (ACT and CFT). Relationship and communication patterns → Marie (EFT and NVC). Insight, depth, childhood echoes → Anna (PDT). Strategic decisions and work-life direction → Mikkel. If you’d rather not pick by hand, the matching guide at which AI coach is right for me asks a few questions and suggests a fit.
Can I switch coaches?
Yes — at any time, in the app. Account-level memory of who you are travels with you across coaches. Coach-specific conversation history stays in the coach you started with, so switching to Judith doesn’t hand Anna’s reflective notes over; that conversation is still there when you switch back. Many users keep two or three coaches active in parallel for different parts of their life.
Will the coach actually remember things from last week?
Yes, in most cases. Long-term context gets summarized for performance, so deeply specific details from weeks ago may need re-anchoring; but the “remember when I told you about my brother” prompt usually works, and the coach picks up the thread you were on. Memory is what turns talking to a chatbot into having an ongoing thing — Verke is built around that as a primary feature, not a nice-to-have.
What's the difference between Verke and ChatGPT?
Verke has specialist coaches trained in evidence-based modalities (CBT, PDT, ACT, CFT, EFT, NVC), persistent multi-week memory, voice coaching, end-to-end encryption, and clinical guardrails for crisis and severity. ChatGPT is a general-purpose assistant — useful for many things, but not designed for ongoing emotional work, not encrypted in the same way, and without the specialist depth or the safety routing. Different jobs, different tools.
Can I use Verke without an account?
Yes for the 7-day trial — no email, no phone number, no payment method, just a nickname. After the trial, Basic ($4.99/month) or Premium ($14.99/month) requires an account, but the account itself can still be pseudonymous: an email is needed for billing recovery, but no real name, no phone, no social-platform login. Privacy is the default, not the upsell.
What does Verke NOT do?
Verke does not diagnose, prescribe, replace clinical care, conduct crisis intervention, retain conversation content readable by staff, or train models on your conversations. Coaches push back rather than over-validate, sit with discomfort rather than dissolve it with reassurance, and route you to human care when severity warrants it. The full list — and the reasoning behind each line — lives in what Verke won’t do and why.
More on this: Inside Verke: what AI coaching feels like.
Cluster 5 of 8
Who benefits
Six questions about who AI coaching actually fits — social anxiety, first-timers, introverts, working professionals, students, and the therapy-averse. Framed as positive affordances, not as exclusions — the question is "who does this format help," not "who should be turned away."
A note on what isn't in this cluster: ADHD- and autism-specific framings are deliberately left out for now. Those framings need clinical nuance we'd rather not approximate, and we're deferring them to dedicated articles. The six audiences below are the ones the format genuinely serves well today.
Who is AI therapy especially good for?
Six audiences find AI coaching especially valuable: people with social anxiety, people who’ve struggled with traditional therapy, first-time help-seekers, shy or introverted people, time-constrained working professionals, and students. The common thread isn’t a clinical profile — it’s the situations where the format itself removes barriers. Anyone who would otherwise hesitate to seek support, or skip it entirely because of cost, schedule, or social-energy cost, tends to find AI coaching meets them where they are.
Is AI coaching only for tech-comfortable people?
No — the interface is conversational. If you can text a friend or hold a video call, you can use AI coaching with no learning curve. There’s no jargon, no complicated setup, and no technical onboarding. Older adults, less-online users, and people who don’t identify as “tech people” all use Verke without difficulty. The product was built so that the technology gets out of the way and the conversation is the whole experience.
Can older adults use AI therapy?
Yes — voice coaching especially fits this audience. Talking out loud rather than typing matches the rhythm of a phone call, which most older adults are deeply familiar with. The product doesn’t require any new digital skills beyond what’s needed for a normal text or voice conversation. Adoption among older users is steady; it’s not a young-people-only product, and the privacy posture (no email required, end-to-end encryption) often appeals to this demographic specifically.
Can someone in active therapy benefit from AI coaching?
Yes — and many users do exactly this. AI coaching works well for between-session continuity, skill practice, processing what came up in session before the next one, and rehearsing difficult conversations you’re planning to bring to your therapist. It doesn’t replace the therapist; it gives you a thinking partner for the days in between. See AI therapy between therapist sessions for the practical version of this pattern.
Can AI therapy help if my problem is really specific or weird?
Usually yes. AI coaching adapts to the specific shape of your situation rather than running standard protocols, which means it tends to handle unusual or specific situations well — niche relationship dynamics, unusual work setups, identity questions that don’t map onto a textbook category. If something feels too specific to bring to a generalist coach, that’s often exactly the kind of situation where AI coaching surprises people with how well it engages.
What if I’m not sure if AI coaching is right for me?
Try the 7-day free trial — no email, no payment method, no commitment. Three real sessions with a real situation usually tell you whether the format fits. If after a week the coach has been useful, you have your answer; if not, you cancel and you’ve lost nothing but a small amount of time. The trial is built to make the “is this for me” question answerable through experience rather than speculation.
More on this: Who benefits from AI therapy?.
Cluster 6 of 8
Modalities
Six questions about the therapy modalities Verke supports — CBT, PDT, ACT, CFT, NVC, and the differences between them. If you've heard of CBT and want to know what the alternatives offer, this is the cluster.
The big choice for most readers is between CBT (tool-oriented, structured, fast) and psychodynamic (relational, slower, depth-first). Both are well-evidenced for different things. The answers below help you self-sort, and the pillar article goes deeper on which modality tends to fit which kind of question.
What’s the most common type of AI therapy?
CBT is the most widely implemented in AI coaching, because its structured pattern — name a thought, test it, try a small experiment, debrief — maps cleanly onto AI interaction patterns. Many AI coaching products run only some flavor of CBT for that reason. Psychodynamic, ACT, EFT, CFT, and NVC are rarer and more specialized; Verke is one of the few products that runs all six in dedicated coach personas rather than a flattened blend.
How do I pick between CBT and psychodynamic therapy?
CBT is for the question “what do I do about this specific thing?” Psychodynamic is for the question “why does this keep happening to me?” Different questions, different work. If you want a small experiment to run by Friday, CBT (Judith). If you want to sit with a pattern and ask what it’s about underneath, PDT (Anna). The dedicated decision guide at CBT or psychodynamic — which AI coach goes deeper on the choice.
Can AI do couples therapy (EFT)?
Yes — Marie supports two partners sharing one chat, using EFT framing. Both of you can be in the same conversation; Marie tracks the cycle between the two of you, names the attachment dynamics underneath, and helps the conversation slow down enough that both people can hear each other again. It’s not equivalent to licensed couples therapy with a human EFT therapist, and Marie will route you to one when severity warrants it, but many couples find AI-led EFT genuinely useful for the day-to-day version of the work.
Is “third-wave” therapy the same as ACT?
ACT is one of the third-wave therapies, alongside mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) and dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). “Third wave” means modalities developed after classical CBT that integrate acceptance, mindfulness, and values-based action rather than relying purely on cognitive restructuring. ACT is the third-wave modality Verke runs (via Amanda) — MBCT and DBT are not currently part of the coach roster.
Which modality is best-studied?
CBT by far — thousands of randomized trials across anxiety, depression, OCD, PTSD, eating disorders, insomnia, and more. The other modalities have solid evidence bases but smaller trial counts: PDT for depression and personality disorders, ACT as a transdiagnostic intervention, EFT for couples distress, CFT for high-shame conditions, and NVC primarily as a communication framework studied in conflict-resolution and workplace contexts rather than as a clinical intervention. Trial count is not the same as fit-for-your-problem, though.
Can I mix modalities?
Yes — many users start with one coach and later try another when the work shifts. A typical pattern: start with Judith for the immediate anxiety symptom, then move to Anna once the symptom has loosened and the underlying question becomes more interesting. Account-level memory carries with you across coaches, so the new coach knows who you are without you having to re-introduce yourself. Some users keep two or three coaches active in parallel for different parts of life.
More on this: Types of AI therapy: six modalities compared.
Cluster 7 of 8
Getting started
Six questions about the first month of AI coaching — picking a coach, rhythm vs duration, what week one feels like, signs it's working, and what to do if it isn't. The practical-onboarding cluster.
The single most useful first-month framing is rhythm-over-duration: three short sessions a week beats one long session a week for almost every audience. Behavior shifts arrive before feeling shifts, and the early weeks are where most people decide whether the format is for them.
How long should my first session be?
Fifteen to twenty minutes for most people. End when you feel settled or when you’ve gotten what you came for, even if that’s sooner. There’s no minimum-effective-dose myth here — a short useful session beats a long dutiful one. The next session picks up where this one left off, so anything you didn’t reach today is still there waiting on Tuesday.
How often should I use AI coaching in the first week?
Two to four times. Rhythm matters more than duration in the early weeks. Three short check-ins beat one marathon session, because the work compounds when you’re returning while the previous conversation is still warm. If you’re only opening it once and then forgetting for five days, the rhythm hasn’t landed yet — try shorter sessions tied to a specific moment (mornings, after meetings, before bed) rather than waiting for the right occasion.
Should I switch coaches if the first one doesn't click?
Yes — but try two or three sessions with the first pick before deciding. The first session can feel slightly off because you’re both calibrating; by the third session a coach either feels like the right register for you or it doesn’t. If by then it’s still not landing, switch. Many people end up with two coaches active in parallel for different parts of life, not one universal coach.
What if I have no idea what to talk about on day 1?
Start with “I’m not sure what to say, but I thought I’d try this.” The coach handles the opening from there. The “I don’t know where to begin” opener is one of the most common starts, and coaches are explicitly built for it. The thing you mentioned almost-as-an-afterthought often turns out to be the actual thread — let the conversation drift and notice what surfaces.
When should I upgrade from trial to paid?
If you’re using it three or more times in the trial week and the conversation feels like it’s going somewhere, paying unlocks Premium and the work continues uninterrupted. If you’ve used it once and forgotten, pause and come back later — there’s no urgency. Verke is most useful when it’s integrated into a real-life rhythm, not when it’s a try-once obligation. The trial gives you the data you need to decide.
What's the first sign it's working?
Usually behavior, not feeling. People making the call they’d been avoiding, asking the question they’d been dodging, going to the thing. Feeling-based signals — calmer mornings, less rumination, more presence — come slower and are harder to notice in real time. If you’re three weeks in and the small actions are easier to take, it’s working. If everything feels the same and your behavior hasn’t shifted, name that to the coach so the work can move.
More on this: Getting started with AI coaching.
Cluster 8 of 8
Alternatives
Six questions for the audience that has decided traditional therapy isn't the right fit right now — what the real alternatives are (AI coaching, self-help, support groups, peer counseling, lifestyle, structured reflection), how they compare, and when therapy is still the right tool.
The frame here is non-gatekeeping: alternatives aren't a consolation prize for people who can't access "real" help. They're different shapes of help that work for different situations, and many of the people who get the most out of them combine several rather than picking one. Read the answers and follow the pillar link for the full landscape.
Are therapy alternatives as effective as therapy?
It depends what you’re working on. For mild-to-moderate distress, skill-building, reflective work, lifestyle-driven mood issues, and the ordinary shape of being-a-person, many alternatives are comparably useful — and the comparison isn’t even the right frame, because they’re often doing different work than therapy. For diagnosable clinical conditions that need assessment, medication, or specialist treatment, therapy is more thorough. The honest answer is that “effectiveness” depends on what you’re trying to do, not on a fixed ranking of options.
What's the best therapy alternative?
There is no single best. Different alternatives do different work. AI coaching is good for self-directed reflective work and skill-building. Support groups are good for connection and shared experience. Self-help books are good for structure and frameworks. Exercise and sleep are good for mood foundations. Journaling is good for noticing patterns. Pick the one that matches what you’re actually working on — and the people who get the most out of alternatives usually combine several rather than picking one.
Is AI coaching a full therapy alternative?
For self-directed skill-building, reflective work, decision support, and the regular shape of being-a-person — yes, often. For clinical conditions, medication management, insurance-billable diagnoses, or situations that need a licensed clinician’s judgment — no, and AI coaching will tell you so. The honest framing is that AI coaching is a different shape of help that handles a real and useful range, not a replacement for everything therapy does.
Can I use therapy alternatives INSTEAD of therapy?
For many people, yes — at least for periods, sometimes for years, sometimes permanently. Plenty of people do good reflective work without ever sitting in a therapist’s office, using some combination of self-help, support groups, AI coaching, exercise, journaling, and the ordinary structures of friendship and meaning. Watch for severity signals — sleep collapse for weeks, suicidal thoughts, panic attacks, substance use escalating, dissociative episodes — and step up to professional care if you see them. Otherwise, alternatives can be the whole answer.
Are support groups safe?
Well-structured ones with peer norms and trained moderators, generally yes. The 12-step traditions, NAMI-affiliated groups, condition-specific charities’ groups, and university-run peer-counseling programs all have established safeguards and a track record. Unmoderated chat groups, random Discord servers, and groups built around a single charismatic figure are more variable — worth approaching with the same caution you’d bring to any unstructured social space. The right question isn’t “is this safe” in the abstract, but “does this group have norms, moderators, and a history of handling hard moments well.”
How do I pick the right alternative?
Match the alternative to the work. If you want to build skills, AI coaching or workbook-driven self-help. If you’re lonely or want shared experience, a support group. If your mood is the problem, start with exercise, sleep, and sunlight before reaching for cognitive tools. If you’re processing something specific, journaling or AI coaching. If you’re in crisis, none of the alternatives — call 988 (US) or 116 123 (UK/EU) or your local crisis line. Most people end up combining several alternatives over time; the “right” one is usually a stack, not a single choice.
More on this: Therapy alternatives.
About this FAQ
Three questions about how this page was built and how to use it well.
The questions in this section are the ones we get asked most often about the FAQ itself rather than about AI coaching. They're short on purpose — if you want depth, the eight pillar articles are the right next step.
Why is this FAQ so long?
Because AI therapy is a new category and people legitimately have a lot of questions. We chose to put the answers in one place rather than scatter them across thirty pages — if a question is on your mind, this page should have it covered, with a link to the deeper article on that specific topic. The depth of content here reflects the depth of the topic, not padding.
How should I use this FAQ?
Two ways. Read the cluster that matches your question (Safety, Comparison, Cost, Inside Verke, Who Benefits, Modalities, Getting Started, or Alternatives) — each section opens with a one-sentence framing and ends with a link to the full pillar article. Or use Cmd-F / Ctrl-F to search for the exact phrase you’re wondering about; this page is built so that long-tail queries hit it directly.
What if my question isn't here?
Bring it to any Verke coach with the seven-day free trial. No account is needed to start, and the coach will either answer the question or tell you honestly that it’s a question for a human professional. If you spot a question we should add to this list, the path to suggesting it is the same: tell a coach. We watch the patterns.
Work with Judith
If you've scrolled this far, the questions are probably starting to thin out. Judith is the most common first-coach choice among readers who arrive at Verke through the long-tail FAQ route — her structured cognitive-behavioral register pairs well with the kind of mind that wants to read the whole manual before pressing the button. Seven-day free trial, no account needed, no credit card. For more on the method, see Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.
Try a CBT exercise with Judith — no account needed
The eight pillar articles
Verke provides coaching, not therapy or medical care. Results vary by individual. If you're in crisis, call 988 (US), 116 123 (UK/EU, Samaritans), or your local emergency services. Visit findahelpline.com for international resources.