More About Hypnotherapy

Hypnotherapy And Its Benefits
What Are The Benefits Of Hypnotherapy?

The hypnotic state allows a person to be more open to discussion and suggestions. It can improve the success of other treatments for several conditions such as:


• Phobias, fears, and anxiety.


• Sleep disorders.


• Depression.


• Stress.


• Post-trauma anxiety.


• Grief and loss.



Hypnotherapy might be used to help with pain control and to overcome habits, such as smoking or overeating. It might also be helpful for a person with severe symptoms or in need of crisis management.

How can Hypnosis help?

Hypnosis can help with a range of conditions, including but not limited to:

abandonment, addictions, age regression, fears, anxiety, anger, assist healing, emotion regulation, memory, motivation, nail-biting, negativism, nightmares, obsessions, OCD, pain management, panic attacks, career success, change habits, build birth, communication, controlling, concentration, cravings, death or loss, discouraged, dreams, exercise, perfectionism, sexual dysfunction, problem-solving, forgiveness, self-confidence, self-control, headaches, sleep disorders, sports, stress, medical problems, relationship problems, trauma, etc

What is Hypnotherapy
Conscious vs Subconscious

Before studying hypnotherapy and the mind, I "thought" I mainly used my conscious mind to effectively manage my day. I used to place so much importance on my ability to analyze, think and plan. Yet as I dove into researching the subconscious mind, I soon learned that I was completely wrong. I was shocked to learn that we only use 10-12% of our conscious mind and 88-90% of our subconscious mind! Our subconscious mind is our long-term memory, meaning it stores everything that we have ever seen, heard, learned or experienced. The subconscious stores information every minute of every day, no matter what state of consciousness we are in. So when we experience an intense emotion, new ideas and beliefs become impressed upon our subconscious. The more intense the emotion, the deeper the belief becomes imprinted upon our subconscious. This explains why negative beliefs about ourselves can become stored in our subconscious and why it's nearly impossible to change our deep-seated beliefs on our own. Another way to look at this is to view the subconscious mind like a computer or smart phone. Imagine our negative beliefs about ourselves (I'm stupid, I need to be perfect, I need to please others so that others will like me) are like software programs or apps for our phones. Our computers and phone

Contact Me

Follow Me