European societies are undergoing profound transformations driven by globalization, migration, demographic change, digital acceleration, and increasing social uncertainty. These dynamics are accompanied by rising levels of psychosocial distress, identity-related conflicts, and challenges to social cohesion, positioning mental health as a central arena for shaping European and global futures. This article introduces the concept of the Global Psychotherapist as a future-oriented professional role that responds to these developments by reframing psychotherapy as a culturally embedded, value-based, and anticipatory social practice. Drawing on Positive and Transcultural Psychotherapy (PPT), the article conceptualizes psychotherapy as a micro-level space in which uncertainty, value pluralism, and future orientation are emotionally processed and ethically negotiated. Central to this framework is the Life Balance Model, which structures human experience across the domains of body and health, achievement and work, relationships and contact, and meaning and future orientation. Interpreted through a futures research lens, the model functions as an anticipatory guiding framework for navigating uncertainty, diversity, and plural value systems in contemporary Europe. By linking psychotherapy, futures studies, and transcultural competence, the article highlights complementarities between psychological and systemic perspectives on social transformation. It contributes to theoretical debates on European futures, professional education, and the evolving role of mental health professions in fostering resilience, agency, and unity in diversity within increasingly complex and uncertain societies.
Hamid Peseschkian (Sat,) studied this question.