Posts Tagged ‘clinical hypnotherapist’

How can Clinical Hypnotherapy help with attaining my New Year goals?

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

New Year’s Resolutions: Will Power or simply a Decision?

At this time of year, resolutions, best intentions and goals for the year ahead are not far from anyone’s awareness. But how do we set and more importantly stick to the goals that we set? We can all understand that logically it doesn’t make sense to smoke, drink to excess or eat an entire selection box, yet many of us persist! So it easy to see that the logical part of our brain is not the only part of us that we need to recruit to help us achieve goals.

What many people don’t understand is that our brain can be split into distinct parts and one of those parts is the primitive area of the brain. This is the area that doesn’t necessarily see the harm in smoking and other unhealthy habits (it is not an intellect). Unless we recruit the assistance of this area of the brain too, giving up a habit or sticking to a new regime can be incredibly difficult. A little bit like trying to drive your car forward when it is in reverse gear!

BrainIllustr How can Clinical Hypnotherapy help with attaining my New Year goals?

Many of my clients have said to me that they lack willpower and it is a common misconception that willpower is what is required to overcome challenges. In fact, willpower is what we require when we are working without the agreement of our primitive brain; we can achieve things this way but it is often difficult and a constant challenge, leading in most cases to failure!

A more effective way of achieving any goal is to get your entire brain on board, get yourself into first gear! One key way to do this is to work on our intent; to put it simply we need to decide 100% that we are going to “go for it”. When we get ourselves into this mindset where there are no get out clauses our conscious and subconscious work together to help us achieve our goal. Both the logical and primitive parts of our brain help us to succeed. Several things happen when we truly make a decision to make a change, one of these is that our brain helps us to come up with not only the motivation to succeed but also solutions to potential pitfalls and problems. We have far greater ability to overcome challenges than we often give ourselves credit for, but to access our greatest creativity we need to have the right mindset. This is the mindset of 100% intent.

If you are struggling to achieve any goal then take a step back and get your mindset right. Once you have recruited the help of all of your brain, achieving your goals becomes much easier and willpower will be obsolete. As the saying goes: “get the mindset right and the rest is easy”.

There are many examples of individuals employing this way of approaching challenges, for example many ladies give up smoking easily when they find out they are pregnant, although they might have struggled in the past. For those who believe it is simply unacceptable to smoke when pregnant it creates the mindset of 100% intent- smoking is simply not an option! I have worked with numerous clients who have recounted examples of the power of mindset.

Whatever your goals are for 2010, good luck and remember to congratulate yourself for your successes and be kind if you experience any setbacks- this too will help to ensure your ultimate success.
For information on how hypnosis can help you to achieve your goals and align your conscious and subconscious, please get in touch.

Insomnia – can Clinical Hypnotherapy help?

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Zofie Kucia, C1’s Clinical Hypnotherapist writes:

Sleep Problems- In a nutshell

Cause:Sleep disturbances such as an inability to fall asleep or waking during the night can be caused by either stress or a lifestyle with too much going on. What can happen is that as a result of a particularly stressful period such as a divorce, trouble at work, bereavement or similar we enter into a heightened state of anxiety and during this time, although we “consciously” understand that we are not in danger our subconscious doesn’t understand this. Put simply, because it does not make sense to sleep when we are in danger we will either struggle to get to sleep or we might manage to fall asleep (often because exhaustion overrides the anxiety) and then wake during the night. Because of how REM sleep and slow wave sleep interact out sleep can be interrupted as the body struggles to maintain the correct proportions of dreaming sleep and slow wave.

Simply doing too much can also lead to sleep disturbances. Our body works in line with natural rhythms and if we completely override these by being on the go all the time and taking no breaks it can then be hard to relax and fall asleep when we want to. We lie in bed, desperate to get to sleep but with a mind that is racing. Typically the “law of reversed effect” will then kick in; this states that: “the harder you try the harder it becomes”, and this further perpetuates the problem.
Once a sleep problem has been established it then adds to our stress and we feed into a vicious cycle. Many of us will then start to worry about it, focus on it and talk about it; this too unfortunately only serves to worsen the problem. Because our subconscious cannot tell the difference between reality and our thoughts, every time we think about the fact that we cannot sleep we strengthen the association and eventually the behavioural template can become pretty entrenched.

The Solution:
Believe it or not, the actual process of dealing with a poor sleep pattern in simple. In essence, we want to reverse the cycle that caused it! So, firstly we need to create an environment which is conducive to a good sleep pattern. Such an environment is a low stress one (OR, if there is moderate stress it is essential to employ healthy means of managing this) and also a daily schedule which includes some breaks- even if they are short!

Secondly, it is essential to stop focussing on the sleep issue; of course this is easier said than done but it is doable with some practice and dedication. It is also important to start to stop engaging in any habits you might have understandably developed as a result of the sleep challenges. An example might be going to bed slightly later; typically this involves relaxing more about the whole issue.
This is backed up with deep relaxation during sessions, which is enormously helpful in terms of reversing the cycle and letting both your body and your subconscious know that “everything is ok”. In addition to this I focus on powerful suggestion work, essentially reprogramming your subconscious so that it gets the message that from now on you can sleep “normally”.

Case History of Stress-related Sleep Disorder:
A typical example of a client I helped to start to sleep properly again is client A. She came to see me as she would sometimes wake during the night and at other times had difficulty getting off to sleep. Her mother had died in difficult circumstances about a year earlier and this had caused her much distress. She had a busy, stressful job. Client A took away the relaxation CD along with her “homework” of focussing away from the sleep issue and learning to use her imagination in a positive manner. Over the course of several weeks she listened to the CD which got her off to sleep most nights, her nightmares began to cease and she felt calmer at work. At first she found it a challenge to think more positively but after a while it seemed much more natural. She started to go back to the gym and yoga classes and felt much calmer through doing this. Using some CBT techniques she was able to deal with difficult people at work much more calmly; she also learned that nightmares can serve a useful purpose and not to dwell on these. Over approximately ten weeks her sleep settled back to normal and one of the things that helped her enormously was learning that the mindset of “I need eight hours sleep a night” was putting pressure on her and serving to perpetuate her problem; she started to see that this might not necessarily be a helpful belief to have. As a “side effect” of therapy she gave up smoking and reported feeling much calmer and happier.

Case History of a busy lady with insomnia:
Client B presented with a severe problem in getting to sleep which had been troubling her for some time. She ran her own company with sole responsibility for the organisation. When we first met she told me that everything was fine in her life, the only problem was that she couldn’t sleep; if only she could sleep, everything else would be fine. She had not been on holiday or had a proper break from work for around a year, had a very hectic lifestyle of work and play and was a perfectionist. I gave her a CD along with my usual explanation of the causes of sleep problems. At first it was difficult for her to see that it would be essential for her to get her life in order to sort out the sleep problem instead of wanting the sleep to magically fix which would then sort her life out. After some sessions focused predominantly on relaxation, client B began to come up with some solutions that would help her. She made some changes at work, made inroads into her perfectionist tendencies and booked two holidays!
Following on from this she found it easier to focus away from the sleep issue and relax more. The combination of changes both lifted her mood and enabled her to start to sleep properly once more. During therapy she stopped taking her prescribed sleeping tablets. She also learned that once her life was in balance her sleep could then balance itself- and not vice versa!

Can Clincal Hypnotherapy do anything for my insomnia?

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Our Clinical Hypnotherapist, Zofie, writes:

As a Clinical Hypnotherapist I have worked with clients with sleep problems. These have ranged from not being able to get to sleep, to those who have the ability to fall asleep but then wake during the night and those suffering from terrifying nightmares. A number of clients have suffered for years and arrive with little hope that I can help. As such it is often quite difficult to persuade people that insomnia and poor sleep patterns can be helped in a matter of days or weeks.

Firstly, I ask all sorts of questions relating to the sufferer’s lifestyle and daily schedule as well as probing into their stress levels and stressors. In my experience, what the client is doing is to keep the problem going which becomes apparent very quickly. Sometimes a particular event can trigger the sleep problem and the event may be subsequently dealt with, unfortunately by this time the sufferer has got into the habit of not sleeping or not sleeping well. When facing this challenge the habit can be hard to shift.

For others there doesn’t appear to be a trigger although it can be set off by rising stress levels.
In either event, help in managing stress levels backed up by suggestion work and guidance to help break old habits these longstanding problems can be shifted.

For many individuals it seems like they are stuck in a difficult vicious cycle which can seem almost impossible to break without help; the fear of not sleeping ultimately leads to certain rituals or habits being formed which further serve to strengthen the fear and as a consequence, the problem.
Many sufferers will relate to the idea of the law of revered effect which states: “the harder you try the harder it becomes” and this is especially true for sleep! But it can be hard to stop trying when it has become habitual which is where intense relaxation and confidence building can help.

Hypnotherapy can help you to bridge the gap between the fear of not sleeping and breaking the mould thereby creating new and healthy sleep habits. And, if you would like help and advice on how to deal with a sleep disorder or anything similar please get in touch. I can be contacted on 0117 922 1542 and 07966 094 979.
Zofie
Clinical Hypnotherapist
DHP.HPD.MAPHP.MNCH
CBT Trained

Is Is hypnotherapy the “Magic Wand Treatment” for the overweight?

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Zofie, our clinical hypnotherapist writes:

As a practising Hypnotherapist I have worked with numerous clients seeking to lose weight. Much misunderstanding about to the mechanics of hypnosis and hypnotherapy exists which can sadly lead to some potential contenders being “put off” this type of help.

Having successfully helped many clients with weight loss it has indeed been remarked on many occasions that saying “no” to things has been easy and therefore the weight loss itself much easier. Outsiders witnessing the client lose weight can therefore sometimes perceive the process as magical- as if a magic wand has indeed been waved over the inactive participant.
But if we consider what really happens during a typical course of hypnotherapy for weight loss it becomes clear that although sometimes the results can appear to be magical or miraculous, in fact what is happening is much more straight forward; although no less impressive for that.

Typically a client wishing to lose weight is firstly helped to achieve a generally calm frame of mind and this is vital. When we are stressed out, depressed or chronically angry for many of us it can seem almost impossible to lose weight, or achieve any other sort of goal for that matter. When we are in such a negative frame of mind we both need the excess food as a crutch and don’t have access to the intellectual function of our brain which we require to take action. As such, simply removing this background stress can help the previously impossible become achievable.

This is coupled with subconscious reprogramming which again can sound rather weird and wonderful (and the results it can help us to achieve most certainly are) the process itself is incredibly straightforward. During trance or a state of focused awareness we have greater access to the subconscious. This part of our brain is thought to run around 90% of our actions and so altering things at this level can bring about enormous change.

Other simple yet potentially life changing techniques are also used, such as learning to focus on how you want things to be instead of worrying about what might happen or what has happened. Other techniques I use are self esteem boosting exercises, positive visualisation, relaxation, meditation and skills like the art of saying no!

The combination of these processes, an opportunity to “get things off your chest” and refocus is what leads to what can seem like a magic wand effect. In reality there is no “magic” but nonetheless when you are committed to losing weight the process can be incredibly effective and often enlightening. Although you still need to take the steps, this process can cause you to feel like someone is holding your hand along the way, guiding you and carrying the weight!
If you are interested in finding out more please contact Zofie on:
info@newlifecatalyst.co.uk
or telephone 07966 094 979.