“My goal is for people to get better. I do the best I can, with my knowledge, based on research… But it is true that some things have escaped me…” Jeanne Siaud-Facchin, 65, has affable manners and answers to everything. She presents herself with a soft voice, composed, in a process of humility. Splendid facades of Parisian buildings emerge through the bay window of his office, at the Cogito’Z center in Paris. This is where this charismatic blond-haired psychologist is used to receiving her patients, mainly high intellectual potential (HPI), since she was propelled popess of the subject.

From the beginning of the 2000s, she was particularly interested in gifted children and their difficulties, before multiplying best-selling books and psychiatric centers, largely contributing to the development of HPI assessments. Today, she is the target of much criticism for her methodology and the juicy economic machine she has built. Mainly because this psychologist, who went from clinical study to liberal practice, built her approach on the basis of this theory, which she summarizes today with great care: “People with sharp intelligence have a different relationship to the world, an increased sensitivity, which, for some, can lead to suffering. »

In his writings, the line is willingly much coarser, striking than“being gifted associates a very high level of ress

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