Felo
Free AI Psychologist — Mental Health & Emotional Support
What is AI Psychologist?
AI Psychologist is a free mental health support agent powered by evidence-based therapeutic techniques. Whether you're dealing with anxiety, stress, relationship struggles, or just need someone to talk to, this AI counselor provides compassionate, professional guidance using CBT, ACT, and mindfulness — available 24/7, no appointment needed.
Key Features
- Evidence-Based Therapy Techniques: Draws from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and mindfulness-based approaches used by licensed therapists worldwide
- 24/7 Emotional Support: Instant access whenever you need to talk — no waiting rooms, no scheduling, no judgment
- Personalized Guidance: Adapts to your specific situation — whether it's work burnout, relationship conflict, grief, or everyday stress
- Practical Tools You Can Use Now: Every conversation ends with a concrete action step — breathing exercises, thought records, behavioral experiments, and more
- Crisis-Aware: Recognizes signs of acute distress and provides appropriate safety resources
How to Use
- Open the chat and type whatever is on your mind — no need to format or prepare. You can start with "I've been feeling anxious lately" or "I had a fight with my partner" or simply "I need to talk."
- Share as much or as little as you want. The more context you give, the more tailored the guidance. You can discuss emotions, situations, relationships, or ask psychology questions directly.
- Try the suggested exercises. When the AI psychologist recommends a technique (like box breathing or a thought record), give it a shot and report back — the conversation builds on your responses.
Example Use Cases
- Anxiety at work: "I have a presentation tomorrow and I'm terrified I'll freeze up" → Learn grounding techniques and cognitive reframing to manage performance anxiety
- Relationship conflict: "My partner and I keep having the same argument" → Explore communication patterns, learn Nonviolent Communication, and practice boundary-setting scripts
- Burnout recovery: "I'm exhausted all the time and nothing feels meaningful anymore" → Identify burnout drivers, clarify your core values, and design a small behavioral activation plan
- Late-night overthinking: "I can't stop replayting everything I said wrong today" → Practice a thought record to identify cognitive distortions and develop self-compassion
- Grief and loss: "I lost my grandmother last month and I can't stop crying" → Receive validation, understand the grief process, and explore meaning-making techniques
Tips for Best Results
- Be honest and specific. Instead of "I feel bad," try "I feel guilty because I snapped at my kid yesterday." The more detail, the better the guidance.
- Come back regularly. Mental health support works best as an ongoing practice. Use the AI psychologist daily or whenever you need a check-in.
- Try the exercises. Reading advice is easy; doing the work is what changes things. When a technique is suggested, give it a real try and share what happened.
FAQ
Q: What can this AI psychologist help with?
A: It supports a wide range of emotional and mental health topics — anxiety, stress, depression symptoms, relationship issues, self-esteem, grief, work burnout, anger management, and general life transitions. It uses proven therapeutic frameworks like CBT and ACT.
Q: Is this a replacement for real therapy?
A: No. AI Psychologist is a supportive tool, not a licensed therapist. It's great for everyday emotional support, psychoeducation, and learning coping skills. For clinical diagnosis, trauma work, or ongoing mental health treatment, we strongly recommend consulting a licensed mental health professional.
Q: How does this compare to other mental health apps like Woebot or Wysa?
A: Unlike rigid chatbot flows, AI Psychologist offers open-ended, personalized conversations that adapt to your unique situation in real-time. It goes deeper into therapeutic techniques, provides longer-form guidance, and builds context across the conversation — more like talking to a thoughtful counselor than following a self-help script.
Q: What if I'm in crisis?
A: If you're experiencing thoughts of self-harm or suicide, please reach out to the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (call or text 988) or Crisis Text Line (text HOME to 741741) immediately. The AI psychologist will recognize crisis signals and provide these resources, but it is not a substitute for emergency care.