Articles Tagged with

Hypnotherapy for Anxiety

Home / Hypnotherapy for Anxiety
Stressed woman holing her head
Health

Hypnotherapy for Panic Attacks in London: Why the Pattern Persists and How to Break It at the Source

There is a particular quality to a first panic attack that almost everyone who has experienced one describes in the same way. It arrives without warning. It convinces the person, absolutely and physically, that something catastrophic is happening. And then it passes, leaving behind something that in many ways is more consequential than the attack itself: a nervous system that now knows this is possible.

That residue is what I want to talk about in this article, because it is the real clinical problem with panic attacks, and it is the piece that most short-term interventions fail to address.

The panic attack itself lasts minutes. The pattern it installs can persist for years.

If you are reading this as someone who has experienced panic attacks, whether once, occasionally, or with a frequency that has begun to shape how you live your life, this article is intended to help you understand what is actually happening and why hypnotherapy addresses it at a level that other approaches often cannot reach.

Stressed woman holing her head

What a Panic Attack Actually Is

A panic attack is an acute activation of the sympathetic nervous system in the absence of genuine threat. In neurological terms, the amygdala, the brain’s threat-detection centre, fires as though a life-threatening danger is present. The body responds accordingly: heart rate surges, breathing becomes shallow and rapid, blood is redirected away from the digestive system and toward the large muscles, adrenaline floods the system. Every physiological event occurring in a panic attack is the body preparing, with great efficiency, to run or fight.

The problem is that there is nothing to run from.

This is not a malfunction. The amygdala is doing precisely what it is designed to do. The issue is that it has become miscalibrated, responding to cues, whether internal sensations, particular environments, specific thoughts, or more diffuse states, as though they signal danger when they do not.

Common presentations I see in my practice include panic attacks triggered by: crowded public spaces or the London Underground, physical sensations such as a slightly elevated heart rate or mild dizziness, social or professional situations involving scrutiny, or what seems like no external trigger at all, occurring at rest or even during sleep. The content of the trigger varies. The underlying mechanism is consistent.

It is worth being clear about the physiology involved, because understanding it matters clinically. During a panic attack, hyperventilation is common. Breathing rapidly and shallowly reduces carbon dioxide in the bloodstream, which changes blood pH and causes the tingling in the hands, the light-headedness, and the feeling of unreality that many people describe. These sensations are real and uncomfortable, but they are not dangerous. The body is not failing. It is responding to a perceived threat that the conscious mind cannot verify but the subconscious insists is present.


Why the Pattern Persists: The Fear of Fear

The first panic attack is frightening. What makes panic disorder a clinical condition rather than an isolated episode is what happens in the aftermath.

The experience of a panic attack is sufficiently alarming that the nervous system files it as evidence of genuine danger. Not the danger of a single moment, but a category of danger: that certain internal states, certain places, certain circumstances, can produce catastrophe. The subconscious begins to scan constantly for those cues. This hypervigilance is well-intentioned. Its function is to detect the danger early so it can be avoided.

But the vigilance itself generates the physiological arousal it is trying to detect. A slightly faster heartbeat, noticed and interpreted as threatening, triggers anxiety. That anxiety raises the heart rate further. The catastrophic interpretation intensifies. The alarm system, monitoring for signs of a panic attack, finds exactly what it is looking for and treats the finding as confirmation. The attack arrives.

This is the central paradox of panic disorder: the attempt to prevent panic creates the conditions for it. Clinical researchers refer to this as the fear-of-fear cycle, and it is the mechanism by which a single frightening event can become a self-sustaining pattern that persists long after any original stressor has resolved.

This cycle tends to produce a second layer of consequences that are often as limiting as the panic attacks themselves. Avoidance develops. Certain places are no longer visited. Certain situations are restructured around. Physical exercise is reduced because it raises the heart rate. Alcohol is used to lower arousal, then rebound anxiety worsens the problem. Life begins to contract.

In London, this contraction carries particular costs. The Underground becomes inaccessible. Networking events, client meetings, professional environments with high social density, these become sites of anticipatory dread. I see clients at my Clerkenwell practice who are managing demanding professional lives while quietly organising their daily existence around the avoidance of situations that might trigger a panic attack. The energy this requires is considerable. The erosion to quality of life, over time, is significant.


Why Reassurance and Breathing Techniques Are Not Enough

There are a number of widely recommended approaches to managing panic attacks, and I want to be fair about their value before explaining why they are often insufficient on their own.

Controlled breathing, particularly techniques that lengthen the exhale and reduce hyperventilation, can meaningfully interrupt the physiological escalation of an acute attack. Extended exhale breathing activates the vagus nerve and begins to engage the parasympathetic nervous system. This is real and useful.

Psychoeducation about the nature of panic, the understanding that the physical sensations are not dangerous and cannot cause harm, is also clinically valuable. Many people find that knowing the dizziness and racing heart are caused by hyperventilation rather than cardiac pathology reduces the secondary layer of fear significantly.

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy has a well-established evidence base for panic disorder, and for many people it provides meaningful reduction in both frequency and intensity of attacks.

But in clinical practice, a meaningful proportion of people who understand panic attacks intellectually, who can explain exactly what is happening physiologically, who have practised breathing techniques and completed CBT protocols, continue to experience them. They are not failing the treatment. The pattern is simply not living where those approaches reach.

Panic attacks originate in the amygdala, a structure that operates subcortically, below the level of conscious cognition. The amygdala responds to threat faster than the prefrontal cortex can formulate a reassuring thought. The body is already in the alarm state before any rational appraisal has had the opportunity to engage. Telling yourself during a panic attack that your heart is fine is not ineffective because it is incorrect. It is limited in effect because it is arriving at the wrong level.

To change the pattern at its root, it is generally necessary to work at the level where the root is located.


The Subconscious Architecture of Panic

When I work with clients presenting with panic attacks, one of the most consistent clinical observations is that the pattern rarely originates with the first attack. The first attack is usually a crystallisation of something that has been developing for longer.

In most cases, there is a preceding period of sustained stress, emotional suppression, or accumulated anxiety that has been managed, reasonably successfully, for some time. The nervous system has been carrying more than it was designed to carry. The first panic attack is often less a sudden breakdown than a system that has finally exceeded its load-bearing capacity.

What the subconscious does with that event is the clinically significant part. It encodes it as evidence of a specific vulnerability, a specific kind of danger. It then constructs a surveillance programme around that evidence. It adjusts the interpretation of ambiguous bodily sensations accordingly. It begins associating certain environments and situations with threat. None of this happens consciously. It happens in the same place where habits are formed, where conditioned responses live, where the automatic patterns that govern the vast majority of daily behaviour are stored.

This is why hypnotherapy is particularly well-suited to panic. It creates direct, focused access to exactly those subconscious processes, in a state where they are more receptive to revision than they are during ordinary waking consciousness.


How Hypnotherapy Works for Panic Attacks

Recalibrating the Nervous System’s Baseline

The hypnotic state is a potent and measurable activator of the parasympathetic nervous system. Research has documented significant reductions in heart rate, breathing rate, cortisol levels, and sympathetic nervous system activity during hypnosis. For someone whose autonomic nervous system has been locked in a state of chronic sympathetic dominance, the regular experience of deep hypnotic relaxation begins to genuinely recalibrate the baseline.

This is not simply a pleasant experience of relaxation, though it is that as well. It is a physiological recalibration. The nervous system, through repeated access to this state, relearns that deep downregulation is possible and safe. The floor of background arousal begins to lower. The threshold between ordinary alertness and alarm increases. Panic attacks, which require a certain level of background tension to ignite, become less likely as that background level comes down.

Many clients notice, within the first few sessions, that their general anxiety level has reduced even before we have done any specific work on the panic pattern itself. This is the recalibration effect, and it matters because it makes the subsequent, more specific work considerably more accessible.

Identifying and Updating the Subconscious Trigger

Using Ericksonian techniques, we work within the hypnotic state to identify the specific subconscious associations that are driving the panic pattern. This often involves exploring the circumstances of the first attack and the period preceding it, not to relive the experience, but to understand, with the perspective and resources of an adult, the context in which the nervous system made its conclusions.

The subconscious mind, in the receptive state of hypnosis, can be introduced to a genuinely revised interpretation of those events. Rather than: “certain internal sensations signal catastrophic danger”, the nervous system begins to build associations with the alternative: that those sensations are manageable, familiar, temporary, and not threatening. Rather than: “certain environments are unsafe”, the subconscious begins to accumulate evidence that they have been navigated without harm.

This is not cognitive reframing at the conscious level. It is working directly with the mechanism that generates the alarm response, in the state where that mechanism is most accessible.

Interrupting the Anticipatory Anxiety Cycle

A significant portion of the clinical work with panic involves the anticipatory anxiety that has developed around the attacks themselves. The dread of the next attack, the constant bodily monitoring, the hypervigilance toward internal sensations, these maintain the elevated baseline that makes further attacks more likely. Addressing the attacks alone, without addressing the fear-of-fear cycle, often produces incomplete resolution.

In hypnotherapy, we work specifically on the anticipatory response: reducing the interpretive significance of ambiguous bodily sensations, diminishing the hypervigilance, and rebuilding a relationship with the body in which its signals are experienced as informative rather than threatening. Clients learn, at the subconscious level, to respond to a slightly elevated heart rate with curiosity rather than alarm. The cycle that sustained the pattern begins to lose its fuel.

Building Genuine Inner Safety

The experience of repeated panic attacks tends to erode something that might be called a basic sense of bodily safety. The body has become a source of alarming surprises. Many clients describe a pervasive low-level vigilance toward their own physical state, a kind of watchfulness that was not there before.

A central part of the hypnotherapy work involves rebuilding a felt sense of safety and competence in relation to the body and to challenging situations. Through guided imagery and inner resource-building techniques, clients develop an experiential sense of being able to manage difficult states, not by avoiding them, but by moving through them without catastrophe. This competence, once accessed repeatedly in the hypnotic state, begins to transfer to real-world experience.


Panic Attacks and Sleep: An Important Connection

It is worth noting the relationship between panic attacks and sleep, because the two are clinically intertwined in ways that are often overlooked.

Nocturnal panic attacks, attacks that occur during sleep and wake the person suddenly in a state of full sympathetic arousal, are more common than is widely appreciated. They typically occur during the transition between sleep stages rather than during dreaming, and they represent the same dysregulated alarm response operating without the involvement of any conscious trigger.

More broadly, the chronic hyperarousal that maintains a panic disorder pattern tends to produce significant sleep disruption: difficulty falling asleep due to heightened bodily vigilance, early morning waking, and non-restorative sleep. Poor sleep, in turn, lowers the threshold for panic, creating a reinforcing cycle. Hypnotherapy’s capacity to work simultaneously on both the panic pattern and the sleep disruption is clinically useful, and many clients find that improvements in one domain begin to support improvements in the other.


Panic Attacks and the London Context

I want to address the specific context of living and working in London, because it matters clinically.

London is a city of relentless sensory and social intensity. The Underground alone, with its heat, density, and the particular social pressure of close proximity to strangers in enclosed spaces, is a significant trigger for many people with panic disorder. The professional culture here is demanding and public in ways that create particular vulnerability for anyone already monitoring themselves for signs of losing control.

The social cost of panic attacks in London is also high. The city’s density means that avoidance strategies are constantly tested. You cannot easily avoid crowds, enclosed spaces, or high-pressure public situations if you work in central London. What might be a manageable limitation in other environments becomes a significant daily negotiation here.

This is one reason why I see such a range of people presenting with panic attacks: professionals who are otherwise high-functioning, people who have been managing the pattern quietly for years without discussing it, and people who have reached a point where the contraction of their life has become no longer acceptable. The common thread is that the pattern has persisted beyond what anyone should have to accommodate as a normal feature of their life.

Panic disorder is highly treatable. That is not a reassuring platitude. It is a clinical fact.


What Does the Research Say?

The evidence base for hypnotherapy in anxiety disorders, including panic, is well developed and growing. A meta-analysis by Milling et al. (2018), published in the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, found robust support for hypnotherapy as an intervention for anxiety across a range of presentations, with effect sizes comparable to other evidence-based treatments.

Research by Kirsch, Montgomery and Sapirstein (1995) demonstrated that adding hypnosis to cognitive-behavioural approaches produced significantly superior outcomes compared to CBT alone across anxiety presentations. Given that CBT is the primary evidence-based treatment for panic disorder, this finding is directly relevant.

Neuroimaging work by Deeley and colleagues at King’s College London documented measurable changes in prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate activity during hypnosis, regions that are directly implicated in the emotional regulation deficits seen in panic disorder. The hypnotic state appears to modulate activity in precisely the brain areas that panic disorder dysregulates.

Research by Alladin (2012) on cognitive hypnotherapy specifically supports the value of integrating hypnotic techniques with psychotherapeutic work for anxiety presentations, and reports that gains made through hypnotherapy tend to be durable at follow-up, a clinically important finding for a condition that can be prone to relapse with symptom-focused approaches.


What to Expect at London Hypnotics

The first session always begins with a full clinical conversation. Panic disorder has a different clinical profile for every person who experiences it, and I want to understand yours specifically: when the first attack occurred, what the circumstances were, which situations you have begun to avoid, how your sleep and daily functioning have been affected, and what you have tried previously.

I use an Ericksonian approach throughout: indirect, permissive, and built around you as an individual rather than a protocol applied generically. This approach is particularly effective for clients who are analytically minded or who have reservations about more directive methods, a description that fits many of the professionals I see.

For panic disorder, most clients find meaningful change across four to six sessions, with nervous system recalibration and reduction in anticipatory anxiety often developing early in the process and the deeper pattern work consolidating across the course of treatment. Some clients with more longstanding or complex presentations benefit from a slightly extended course.

Sessions are available in person at 364 City Road, London EC1V 2PY, a short walk from Angel and Old Street stations, and online for clients who prefer to work from home or who are based outside central London.


Taking the Next Step

Panic attacks are not a character flaw, and they are not a permanent feature of your neurology. They are a pattern, and patterns can change. If what you have read here resonates with your experience, I would welcome the opportunity to speak with you.

You can reach me at 020 7101 3284 or book a free consultation via the link below.

Book Your Free Consultation


Antonios Koletsas is a GHSC-registered and GHR-accredited clinical hypnotherapist practising at 364 City Road, London EC1V 2PY. He specialises in anxiety, panic disorder, insomnia, IBS, and trauma-related presentations, and is trained in Ericksonian Hypnotherapy at BHRTI under Stephen Brooks.

Clinical References

Alladin, A. (2012). Cognitive hypnotherapy for major depressive disorder. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 54(4), 275–293.

Deeley, Q. et al. (2012). Modulating the default mode network using hypnosis. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 60(2), 206–228.

Kirsch, I., Montgomery, G., & Sapirstein, G. (1995). Hypnosis as an adjunct to cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 63(2), 214–220.

Milling, L. S., Valentiner, D. P., & Alladin, A. (2018). The efficacy of hypnosis as an intervention for anxiety: a meta-analytic review. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 66(4), 336–363.

NICE (2011). Generalised anxiety disorder and panic disorder in adults: management. Clinical Guideline CG113. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

Insomnia Hypnotherapy
Health

Can Hypnotherapy Help with Anxiety or Panic Attacks?

Can Hypnotherapy Help with Anxiety or Panic Attacks?

Anxiety and panic attacks affect millions of people across the UK, often disrupting daily life, relationships, and overall well-being. If you’re exploring natural, therapeutic options to regain control, you may be wondering: Can hypnotherapy help with anxiety or panic attacks? The short answer is yes — and the long answer is deeply encouraging.

What Is Hypnotherapy?

Hypnotherapy is a form of guided therapy that uses focused attention, relaxation, and suggestion to access the subconscious mind. Unlike stage hypnosis, clinical hypnotherapy is a safe, evidence-based practice used by trained professionals to help clients overcome emotional, behavioural, and psychological challenges.

At London Hypnotics, we use hypnotherapy to help clients reframe limiting beliefs, reduce physical symptoms of anxiety, and build long-term resilience.

Understanding Anxiety and Panic Attacks

Anxiety is a natural stress response, but when it becomes chronic or leads to panic attacks, it can feel debilitating. Common symptoms include:

  • Persistent worry or racing thoughts
  • Muscle tension and restlessness
  • Difficulty sleeping or concentrating
  • Rapid heartbeat, chest tightness, or breathlessness
  • Feeling detached, dizzy, or overwhelmed

Panic attacks are sudden surges of intense fear or discomfort, often accompanied by physical symptoms that mimic serious medical conditions. They can feel terrifying — but they are treatable.

How Hypnotherapy Helps

Hypnotherapy works by calming the nervous system and addressing the subconscious patterns that fuel anxiety. Here’s how it can support your healing:

1. Rewiring Negative Thought Patterns

Hypnosis helps uncover and reframe deep-rooted beliefs that contribute to anxiety — such as “I’m not safe,” “I can’t cope,” or “I’m not good enough.”

2. Reducing Physical Symptoms

Through deep relaxation and breathwork, hypnotherapy lowers cortisol levels, slows the heart rate, and eases muscle tension — helping you feel physically calmer.

3. Building Coping Strategies

You’ll learn tools to manage triggers, reduce avoidance behaviours, and regain control during anxious moments.

4. Resolving Root Causes

Hypnotherapy can gently explore past experiences, traumas, or emotional blocks that may be contributing to your current anxiety or panic responses.

What the Research Says

Scientific studies support the effectiveness of hypnotherapy for anxiety. A 2016 meta-analysis published in the Journal of Affective Disorders found that hypnosis was significantly more effective than many other psychological interventions in reducing anxiety symptoms.

Another study in Contemporary Hypnosis & Integrative Therapy showed that hypnotherapy reduced panic attack frequency and intensity in patients with panic disorder.

What to Expect in a Session

At London Hypnotics, your first session begins with a detailed consultation to understand your symptoms, triggers, and goals. You’ll then be guided into a relaxed, focused state where we work together to reprogram anxious responses and build emotional resilience.

Sessions are tailored to your unique needs and may include:

  • Relaxation and breathing techniques
  • Positive suggestion therapy
  • Regression therapy (if appropriate)
  • Future pacing and visualisation

All sessions are confidential, compassionate, and designed to empower you.

Is Hypnotherapy Right for You?

Hypnotherapy is suitable for many forms of anxiety, including:

  • Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
  • Panic Disorder
  • Social Anxiety
  • Health Anxiety
  • Performance Anxiety
  • Phobias and fears

It can also complement other treatments such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), counselling, or medication.

Hypnotherapy in London: Your Path to Calm

If you’re based in London and seeking a holistic, client-centred approach to anxiety or panic attacks, London Hypnotics offers a safe and supportive space to begin your journey. Whether you’re dealing with daily stress or sudden panic episodes, hypnotherapy could be the turning point you’ve been searching for.

Ready to Take the First Step?

Book a free consultation today and discover how hypnotherapy can help you feel calmer, more confident, and in control.

Book Now | Serving Central and Greater London | Online sessions available worldwide.

References


Hammond, D. C. (2010). Hypnosis in the treatment of anxiety- and stress-related disorders. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 53(4), 259–273. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00029157.2010.10401721

Valentine, K. E., Milling, L. S., Clark, L. J., & Moriarty, C. L. (2019). The efficacy of hypnosis as a treatment for anxiety: A meta-analysis. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 67(3), 336–363. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31125299/

Hypnotherapy Directory. (n.d.). How hypnotherapy can help with anxiety: A natural approach. https://www.hypnotherapy-directory.org.uk/articles/how-hypnotherapy-can-help-with-anxiety-a-natural-approach

Beechwood Therapy. (2023). Can hypnotherapy help with panic attacks? https://www.beechwoodtherapy.co.uk/post/can-hypnotherapy-help-with-panic-attacks

Reveri. (2024). Hypnosis for panic attacks: Calm your mind naturally. https://www.reveri.com/knowledge/hypnosis-for-panic-attacks

Health

Sleep Better, Stress Less: How Hypnotherapy Can Help You Rebalance This Autumn

As October unfolds and autumn fully settles over London, the change in season affects more than just the colour of the leaves. It influences our mood, energy, and overall well-being.

Many of my clients at London Hypnotics notice that as the days shorten and daylight fades earlier, they begin to feel their motivation drop, their sleep patterns shift, and their minds become busier at night. Some experience increased anxiety, lower mood, or that familiar sense of fatigue that often comes with autumn.

You are not alone. The seasonal transition from summer to autumn is a natural time of adjustment, both physically and mentally. This is also the ideal moment to restore balance and calm. Hypnotherapy provides a powerful and effective way to achieve that.


Why Autumn Can Leave You Feeling Drained or Anxious

Seasonal changes trigger a series of physical and psychological shifts. Reduced sunlight exposure lowers serotonin, the neurotransmitter that supports mood and motivation, and disrupts melatonin, the hormone that regulates sleep. As a result, you may feel sluggish, restless, or emotionally off-balance.

October can also bring new pressures, such as end-of-year work demands, financial concerns, or the mental strain of shorter and colder days. The body’s natural stress response often heightens feelings of fatigue, irritability, and difficulty sleeping.

Some people experience Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), a type of depression linked to reduced sunlight. Others may notice milder changes in energy or mood, sometimes described as an “autumn dip.” Hypnotherapy can help to restore balance during this seasonal transition.


The Mind-Body Connection: Understanding Your Inner Response

The subconscious mind plays a crucial role in the way we think, feel, and respond to life. Stress, anxiety, or fatigue do not just influence our thoughts; they also impact digestion, immunity, hormone balance, and sleep quality. You might feel this as tightness in the chest, a knot in the stomach, or constant racing thoughts.

Hypnotherapy works directly with this mind-body link. By guiding you into a deeply relaxed yet focused state, it allows your subconscious to release built-up tension and reprogram unhelpful patterns. Whether you struggle with overthinking, insomnia, or ongoing stress, hypnotherapy helps create calm and clarity from within.


How Hypnotherapy Improves Sleep

Sleep difficulties are among the most common reasons people seek hypnotherapy, and they often become worse in autumn. You might fall asleep easily but wake in the night, or you may struggle to quiet your mind before bed.

Hypnotherapy helps by teaching the mind to switch off from excessive thinking and associate bedtime with relaxation. During a session, we use guided relaxation and visualization to calm the nervous system, while positive suggestions help to reframe thoughts such as “I can’t sleep” into more empowering beliefs.

Many clients benefit from a personalized sleep hypnosis recording to use at home. Listening regularly reinforces new subconscious associations, helping the mind and body to settle into a natural rhythm of rest.


Relieving Anxiety and Seasonal Stress

Autumn can increase anxiety levels for many people, especially when juggling work, family, or personal challenges. Hypnotherapy addresses anxiety at its source by retraining the subconscious mind to respond calmly to triggers that once felt overwhelming.

Through gentle relaxation and focused suggestion, hypnotherapy helps you let go of unnecessary worry, replace anxious thought patterns, and regain control over your emotional state. It supports the body’s natural relaxation response, helping reduce cortisol levels and promoting lasting calm.

This process is not about losing control. It is about learning to regain control of your internal responses, so that peace and clarity become your new default state.


Rebuilding Motivation and Energy for the Months Ahead

As autumn progresses, it is common to experience a drop in motivation. Darker mornings can make it harder to start the day, and cooler evenings can encourage us to withdraw. Over time, these patterns can affect confidence and focus.

Hypnotherapy helps reignite your sense of purpose by reinforcing positive self-talk, dissolving subconscious resistance to change, and strengthening your inner motivation. Using mental rehearsal techniques, you learn to visualize success, energy, and achievement until they become natural states of being.

Once the subconscious is aligned with your conscious goals, change feels effortless. This is why hypnotherapy is so powerful for helping people move forward with energy and clarity.


The Science Behind Hypnosis and the Brain

Modern neuroscience has helped to explain how hypnosis affects the brain. During hypnosis, brain imaging shows reduced activity in the amygdala, the area responsible for fear and stress, and increased activity in the prefrontal cortex, which governs focus and decision-making.

This means hypnosis is not a form of sleep or loss of control, but a state of heightened focus and receptivity. The brain becomes more integrated, calm, and open to positive suggestion.

Clinical studies demonstrate that hypnosis can improve sleep onset and quality, lower stress hormones, reduce pain perception, and enhance emotional regulation. It provides a natural and holistic way to restore balance between mind and body.


Practical Steps to Support Your Autumn Wellbeing

Hypnotherapy works best when combined with healthy daily habits. You can enhance your results with these simple adjustments:

  1. Get morning light exposure to stabilise your body clock and mood.
  2. Maintain a consistent sleep routine by going to bed and waking at the same time each day.
  3. Avoid screens before bed and use this time for relaxation or listening to your hypnosis recording.
  4. Eat nourishing, grounding foods such as whole grains, leafy greens, and seasonal produce.
  5. Practice mindful breathing or meditation to calm the nervous system.
  6. Learn self-hypnosis techniques to manage stress and improve focus throughout the day.

These small, consistent changes create a foundation of stability and resilience, which hypnotherapy can then strengthen at a deeper level.


Your Autumn Reset with London Hypnotics

This season, give yourself permission to pause and realign. If you have been struggling with poor sleep, low mood, or chronic stress, hypnotherapy can help you find relief and restore your natural sense of balance.

At London Hypnotics, I offer a tailored Autumn Reset Programme designed to support your mind and body through this transitional period. It includes three personalised hypnotherapy sessions, a custom relaxation recording to use at home, and a wellbeing plan to maintain your progress.

Sessions are available both in person at 364 City Road, London, and online. Together, we can create lasting change from within, so you can feel calmer, stronger, and more focused as the year moves forward.


October is not just the beginning of darker days; it is an invitation to turn inward and nurture your mental and emotional well-being. By working with the natural rhythm of the season, you can transform autumn into a period of renewal and clarity.

At London Hypnotics, I have seen clients move from sleeplessness to deep rest, from anxiety to calm, and from exhaustion to renewed motivation. Hypnotherapy allows you to reconnect with your body’s innate wisdom and find peace that lasts.

Take this opportunity to reset and rebalance. Visit london-hypnotics.co.uk or book your Hypnotherapy session here.

References

  • NHS UK (2024). Overview: Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).
  • Hammond, D. C. (2010). Handbook of Hypnotic Suggestions and Metaphors.
  • Rossi, E. L. (2002). The Psychobiology of Mind-Body Healing.
  • American Psychological Association (2023). Seasonal Mood and Circadian Rhythms Research Review.
  • Kirsch, I. (1999). Hypnosis and the Altered State Debate: The Evidence from Neuroimaging Studies.

anxious woman
Health

Finding Calm: How Hypnotherapy in London Can Help with Anxiety

Anxiety is something most of us experience at some point in our lives. For some, it’s occasional nerves before a big event. For others, it can feel like a constant companion — racing thoughts, tightness in the chest, difficulty sleeping, and a sense of dread that just won’t go away.

Traditional approaches like therapy, medication, and lifestyle changes are well-known options. But more people are now asking: can hypnotherapy help with anxiety?

The answer is yes — and research is increasingly supporting it. In this guide, we’ll explore what hypnotherapy really is, how it works for anxiety, what science says, and what you can expect if you decide to try it.

Image by Freepik

Understanding Anxiety

Anxiety isn’t “just in your head.” It’s a whole-body experience. When your brain perceives a threat — whether real or imagined — your nervous system reacts by flooding your body with stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline.

That’s why anxiety feels so physical:

  • Your heart races.
  • Your muscles tense.
  • Your breathing becomes shallow.
  • Your mind loops through “what ifs.”

Over time, your body can get stuck in this cycle, reacting with stress even when no danger is present.


What Hypnotherapy Really Is (and Isn’t)

When people hear the word hypnosis, they often picture stage acts with people clucking like chickens. That’s entertainment — not therapy.

Hypnotherapy is a therapeutic process that uses hypnosis to create a state of deep relaxation and focused attention. In this state, your subconscious mind becomes more open to positive change.

Important to know:

  • You are always in control.
  • You cannot be made to do anything against your will.
  • Most people describe the experience as calming and refreshing.

Think of it as a powerful tool to reset your mental patterns and reduce the intensity of anxious responses.


How Hypnotherapy Works for Anxiety

Anxiety often lives in the subconscious mind — the place where habits, beliefs, and automatic reactions are stored. Hypnotherapy helps by addressing anxiety at this deeper level.

Here’s how:

  1. Relaxation: Hypnotherapy calms the nervous system, reducing the body’s fight-or-flight response.
  2. Reframing thoughts: Through guided suggestions, anxious patterns of thinking can be softened and replaced with calmer, more balanced ones.
  3. Building confidence: Hypnotherapy can boost self-belief in situations that previously triggered fear.
  4. Developing coping tools: Many clients learn self-hypnosis techniques they can use outside of sessions to stay grounded.

What the Research Says

Scientific studies support hypnotherapy as an effective approach for reducing anxiety:

  • A 2016 meta-analysis found that hypnosis produced significant reductions in anxiety across different groups of people.
  • Hypnotherapy has been shown to help with generalized anxiety disorder, test and performance anxiety, medical anxiety (such as before surgery), and even public speaking fears.
  • Brain imaging studies suggest that hypnosis can actually change how the brain processes stress and fear.

While more research is always needed, the evidence so far is promising — and it matches what many clients report in practice.


A Client Story: From Overwhelm to Calm

One client of mine (let’s call her Sarah) had been living with anxiety for years. She described lying awake at night with her heart racing, her mind running through worst-case scenarios.

After just a few hypnotherapy sessions, she noticed a shift. “It’s like I finally have a pause button for my thoughts,” she said. “The same situations come up, but I don’t spiral the way I used to. I feel calmer and more in control.”

Sarah’s experience isn’t unusual — many people find hypnotherapy gives them tools they can carry into daily life.


What to Expect in a Hypnotherapy Session

If you’re new to hypnotherapy, here’s what a typical session might look like:

  1. Initial conversation – We’ll talk about your goals, challenges, and any questions you have.
  2. Guided relaxation – I’ll help you enter a calm, focused state — similar to a daydream.
  3. Therapeutic suggestions – While in this relaxed state, I’ll guide you with imagery and positive suggestions aimed at reducing anxiety.
  4. Reflection and tools – After the session, we’ll talk about your experience and I’ll give you strategies you can use between sessions.

Sessions are always tailored to your unique needs.


FAQs About Hypnotherapy for Anxiety

Is hypnotherapy safe?
Yes. It’s non-invasive, drug-free, and considered very safe when practiced by a trained professional.

Will I lose control?
No. You remain fully aware and in control at all times. Hypnosis is simply a state of focused relaxation.

How many sessions will I need?
That depends on the individual. Some people notice changes after just one or two sessions, while others benefit from several over a few months.

Can hypnotherapy replace therapy or medication?
Hypnotherapy is often most effective as a complementary approach. It can work alongside counseling, medical care, or lifestyle changes.


Is Hypnotherapy Right for You?

If anxiety has been holding you back, hypnotherapy may be worth exploring. It’s gentle, natural, and focused entirely on helping you feel calmer and more confident.

While it’s not a magic cure, many people find it brings lasting relief — and gives them practical tools to manage life’s challenges.


How to book?

Anxiety doesn’t have to control your life. With the right support, it’s possible to break free from the constant cycle of worry and find peace of mind.

Hypnotherapy is one of the most powerful tools for achieving that calm — backed by research, rooted in safety, and tailored to you.

If you’re curious about how it could help you, I invite you to book your hypnotherapy consultation with me. It may be the first step toward a calmer, more balanced life.

Health, Lifestyle

Hypnotherapy for Anxiety: Procedure, Benefits and More

What is Anxiety?

Feeling anxious is normal part of life, especially around work, money, family, school or health. However, it when it becomes chronic and felt in many situations in everyday life then its characterised as anxiety disorder. For people with these disorders, life can feel overwhelmed especially in daily activities that involves new situations, exposure to unknown people or visiting new places.

There are several types of anxiety disorders including:

The role of Hypnotherapy in treating anxiety

Hypnotherapy plays a significant role in treating anxiety, offering an effective complementary approach to traditional psychological interventions. Research indicates that hypnosis can reduce anxiety more effectively when combined with other psychological treatments, such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) or exposure therapy

Mechanisms of Action

Hypnotherapy works by inducing a state of focused attention and reduced peripheral awareness, enhancing a person’s responsiveness to suggestions. This relaxed state allows individuals to:

  1. Tap into internal resources not easily accessible in a fully conscious state
  2. Alter brainwave patterns, promoting relaxation and calmness
  3. Gain greater emotional control and reduce negative thinking

Effectiveness

Studies have demonstrated the efficacy of hypnotherapy in anxiety treatment:

  • A meta-analysis found that hypnosis reduced anxiety more than 79% compared to control participants at the end of active treatment.
  • Hypnosis has shown to be effective in reducing state anxiety and tension.
  • It may positively affect the cardiovascular system by reducing sympathetic activation and increasing parasympathetic tone.

Benefits of Hypnotherapy for Anxiety

Hypnotherapy offers several benefits for individuals struggling with anxiety:

  • Helps break the cycle of negative thinking and dread
  • Builds confidence and self-esteem
  • Encourages relaxation and calmness
  • Allows visualization of positive outcomes
  • Addresses root causes of anxiety
  • Provides a safe and controlled environment for facing fears

Ready to embark your Hypnotherapy Journey?

If you’re struggling with anxiety, consider the transformative benefits of hypnotherapy. This powerful tool helps you tap into your subconscious mind to uncover the root causes of your anxiety and reframe negative thought patterns, leading to lasting relief and a more positive outlook on life.

I offer a personalized approach tailored to your unique experiences and challenges, ensuring that you feel comfortable exploring your thoughts in a safe and supportive environment. Utilizing proven techniques, I have helped many clients overcome their anxiety by promoting relaxation and empowering them to regain control over their thoughts and emotions.

Conveniently located in Islington, London, you can learn more about my services at London Hypnotics. If you’re ready to take the first step towards overcoming anxiety, call me at 020 7101 3284 or visit my website to book your session today.

Don’t let anxiety hold you back any longer—embrace the opportunity for change through hypnotherapy!

Sources

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/anxiety-disorders

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1411835/full

https://www.thetimes.com/article/how-hypnotherapy-helps-soothe-patients-on-nhs-waiting-lists-7fczlr2lx?id=1756158124&gad_source=1

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/generalized-anxiety-disorder-gad

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/panic-disorder-when-fear-overwhelms

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/social-anxiety-disorder-more-than-just-shyness

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11258040

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31251710

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/hypnosis-for-anxiety

Pictures Designed by Freepik

Stressed woman holing her head
Health, Lifestyle

Can Hypnotherapy help my anxiety & stress?

Anxiety and stress are complex psychological phenomena that many individuals experience throughout their lives. There are different types of anxiety disorders and each of them has been studied extensively to understand their mechanisms and also how we can treat them.

The good news is that anxiety is easily treated either with psychological therapies medicine, or a combination of both. Our brains are linked with anxiety for millennia and it is a driving force to improve our lives, but when anxiety overloads our system we are starting to experience different psychological and physiological symptoms.

Anxiety and stress usually go hand in hand, because stress in our daily lives if left unmanageable can lead to anxiety disorders. But stress is not the only cause of anxiety, for example, someone may start to experience anxiety after abuse or trauma. Emotional trauma manifests from the psyche and develops into different types of symptoms and anxiety is one of them. Often people who have experienced emotional abuse or trauma have different psychosomatic symptoms that keep manifesting throughout their lives.

An example of someone who has been dealing with emotional pain and has been manifested in psychosomatic pain can swift from back pain to migraines, poor sleep, weight gain, brain fog, cognitive decline, eating disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, anxiety, depression, or a combination of these.

But, how Hypnotherapy can help with anxiety or stress? the answer is not so simple, but I will try to explain and give you some answers:

Hypnotherapy works by blocking the conscious mind or the chattering mind and accessing the unconscious part of the brain with hypnosis. All your memories, beliefs, bodily functions, and ideas about the world or yourself are stored in the unconscious part of your brain. There is strong evidence that your unconscious mind starts developing when you are a fetus and stops by the age of 7 or 8 years old.

Luckily, this doesn’t mean that it cannot be changed. The good news is that you can use a lot of different tools to change parts of your unconscious mind and some of these tools have been used for hundreds of years by different people around the world. Meditation, affirmations, healing ceremonies, modern psychotherapy, and CBT all help to change how your unconscious mind works. In addition to these different types of therapies, Hypnotherapy has been praised for its efficacy and speed in treating such conditions. Hypnotherapy can go to the root cause of your stress and anxiety, heal the part that is responsible for the symptoms in a very short period, and help you achieve your true potential in life.

Hypnotherapy can also help you find helpful ways to cope with stress in your daily life, teach you breathing techniques that help your body release stress, and also understand yourself and get to know who you are at the deepest level of your being.

Now, you may wonder how to find a good hypnotherapist. I recommend you always choose someone who has been professionally trained, is a member of a registered body like GHR in the UK, and also has experience in working with stress and anxiety and one that you can trust. I offer a free consultation to discuss your issues and find out if we are a good match to work together because the pre-requirement for a successful therapy is rapport and trust with your therapist.

If you are feeling ready to embark on a healing journey, feeling your best version of yourself then I recommend you book a free consultation by clicking here or simply call 020 7101 3284 or 07586755862.

Here are some useful links to manage anxiety

https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/explore-mental-health/publications/how-manage-and-reduce-stress

https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/16-ways-relieve-stress-anxiety

https://www.oxfordhealth.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/OH-195.20-Anxiety.pdf

https://www.nhs.uk/every-mind-matters/mental-health-issues/anxiety

References

Golden, W. L. (2012). Cognitive hypnotherapy for anxiety disorders. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 54(4), 263-274. https://doi.org/10.1080/00029157.2011.650333

Rohaeti, A., wondo, A. S., Pujiastuti, R., Latifah, L., & Widyawati, M. N. (2018). Hypnotherapy as an alternative to reducing anxiety levels, cortisol levels and fetal heart rate among primigravide in the third trimester of pregnancy. International Journal of Nursing and Health Science, 4(3), 5-8. https://doi.org/10.14445/24547484/ijnhs-v4i3p102

Annisa, D. F., Afdal, A., Daharnis, D., & Adlya, S. I. (2019). Hypnotherapy as an alternative approach in reducing anxiety in the elderly. Konselor, 8(1), 32. https://doi.org/10.24036/0201874102696-0-00

Lawrence, P., Murayama, K., & Creswell, C. (2019). Systematic review and meta-analysis: anxiety and depressive disorders in offspring of parents with anxiety disorders. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 58(1), 46-60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2018.07.898

Harandi, A. A., Esfandani, A., & Shakibaei, F. (2004). The effect of hypnotherapy on procedural pain and state anxiety related to physiotherapy in women hospitalized in a burn unit. Contemporary Hypnosis, 21(1), 28-34. https://doi.org/10.1002/ch.285

Ghazali, D. A., Ragot, S., Brèque, C., Guéchi, Y., Boureau-Voultoury, A., Petitpas, F., … & Oriot, D. (2016). Randomized controlled trial of multidisciplinary team stress and performance in immersive simulation for management of infant in shock: study protocol. Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-016-0229-0

Amray, A. N., Munir, K., Jahan, N., Motiwala, F., & Sattar, N. (2019). Psychopharmacology of pediatric anxiety disorders: a narrative review. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.5487

Huynh, M. E., Vandvik, I. H., & Diseth, T. H. (2008). Hypnotherapy in child psychiatry: the state of the art. Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 13(3), 377-393. https://doi.org/10.1177/1359104508090601

Annisa, D. F., Afdal, A., Daharnis, D., & Adlya, S. I. (2019). Hypnotherapy as an alternative approach in reducing anxiety in the elderly. Konselor, 8(1), 32. https://doi.org/10.24036/0201874102696-0-00

Image by freepik

Chronic Pain Hypnotherapy
Health, Lifestyle, Tips, Wellness

Hypnotherapy for Anxiety: A Safe and Effective Treatment Option

Hypnotherapy is a therapeutic technique that uses guided relaxation, focused attention, and heightened suggestibility to create a state of deep relaxation and heightened awareness. It is not a form of mind control, but rather a tool that allows individuals to access their subconscious mind, where deep-seated beliefs and emotions often reside.

Hypnotherapy for anxiety is a safe and effective treatment option that can help individuals identify and address the root causes of their anxiety, change negative thought patterns, reduce stress and relaxation, enhance coping strategies, and increase self-awareness and self-empowerment.

Benefits of hypnotherapy for anxiety:

  • Identify root causes: Hypnotherapy for anxiety can help individuals uncover the underlying causes of their anxiety, such as past experiences, traumas, or thought patterns. This can help individuals to better understand their anxiety and develop more effective coping mechanisms.
  • Change negative thought patterns: Hypnotherapy for anxiety can help individuals to replace negative thought patterns with more positive and constructive ones. This can help to reduce anxiety and improve overall mood and well-being.
  • Reduce stress and relaxation: Hypnotherapy for anxiety can induce deep relaxation, which can reduce stress and promote a sense of calm. This can be helpful for managing anxiety in daily life.
  • Enhance coping strategies: Hypnotherapy for anxiety can equip individuals with new coping strategies and tools for dealing with anxiety-provoking situations. This can help to build resilience and confidence in managing stress.
  • Increase self-awareness and self-empowerment: Hypnotherapy for anxiety can help individuals to develop a stronger connection between their conscious and subconscious minds. This can lead to better self-regulation and emotional control.

How hypnotherapy for anxiety works:

During a hypnotherapy session, the therapist will guide the individual into a state of deep relaxation. Once in this state, the therapist will use suggestion and visualization to help the individual address their anxiety. For example, the therapist may help the individual to identify and challenge negative thoughts, or to develop more positive and constructive thought patterns. The therapist may also help the individual to visualize themselves coping successfully with anxiety-provoking situations.

How to find a qualified hypnotherapist for anxiety:

It is important to find a qualified and experienced hypnotherapist for anxiety. You can ask for recommendations from your doctor or other mental health professional, or you can search online for hypnotherapists in your area. Be sure to read reviews and interview potential hypnotherapists to ensure that you find one who you feel comfortable with and who has experience working with anxiety.

Conclusion:

Hypnotherapy for anxiety is a safe and effective treatment option that can help individuals reduce their symptoms and improve their overall well-being. If you are considering hypnotherapy for anxiety, be sure to find a qualified and experienced hypnotherapist who can help you on your journey to healing and self-improvement.

To book an appointment click my free consultation or call 02071013284

Tags

  • #hypnotherapyforanxiety
  • #anxietytreatment
  • #anxietymanagement
  • #hypnotherapy
  • #mentalhealth
  • #wellness
  • #selfimprovement
  • #healing
  • #stressrelief
  • #mentalhealthawareness
  • #selfcare
  • #mentalwellbeing
  • #anxietyhelp
Lifestyle

Anxiety: The Quick Benefits of Hypnotherapy.

Anxiety is a common mental health condition that affects millions of people around the world. It is characterized by feelings of unease, worry, and fear, often accompanied by physical symptoms such as sweating, trembling, and palpitations. While it is normal to experience anxiety from time to time, it can become a chronic and debilitating condition that interferes with daily life.

Fortunately, there are many effective treatments available for anxiety, and one of the most promising is hypnotherapy. Hypnotherapy is a type of complementary therapy that uses hypnosis to induce a state of deep relaxation and heightened suggestibility. This state can help individuals overcome a wide range of mental and physical issues, including anxiety.

So how exactly can hypnotherapy help with anxiety? Let’s explore some of the key ways:

  1. Addressing the root cause: Hypnotherapy can help individuals uncover the root cause of their anxiety by exploring their subconscious mind. Often, anxiety is a result of past experiences or traumas that have not been fully processed or resolved. Through hypnosis, individuals can access these memories and emotions in a safe and controlled environment, allowing them to work through and release them.
  2. Changing negative thought patterns: Anxiety is often fueled by negative thought patterns and beliefs. Hypnotherapy can help individuals identify and challenge these negative thoughts, replacing them with more positive and empowering ones. This can help to reduce the frequency and intensity of anxiety symptoms over time.
  3. Relaxation and stress reduction: Hypnotherapy induces a state of deep relaxation, which can help to reduce stress and tension in the body. By practicing relaxation techniques during hypnosis sessions, individuals can learn to activate the relaxation response on their own, reducing anxiety in the moment and over the long term.
  4. Building self-confidence: Anxiety can erode self-confidence and self-esteem over time. Hypnotherapy can help individuals build self-confidence and a sense of self-worth by reinforcing positive beliefs and attitudes about themselves. This can help to reduce anxiety and improve overall well-being.

Overall, hypnotherapy is a powerful tool for managing anxiety and improving mental health. While it may not be a suitable treatment for everyone, it is worth considering for those who are open to complementary therapies and looking for a non-invasive and natural approach to anxiety management. If you are struggling with anxiety, speak to a qualified hypnotherapist to learn more about how hypnotherapy can help you overcome your symptoms and improve your quality of life.

To book your free consultation just call 07586755862 or click the contact me.

Privacy Settings
We use cookies to enhance your experience while using our website. If you are using our Services via a browser you can restrict, block or remove cookies through your web browser settings. We also use content and scripts from third parties that may use tracking technologies. You can selectively provide your consent below to allow such third party embeds. For complete information about the cookies we use, data we collect and how we process them, please check our Privacy Policy
Youtube
Consent to display content from - Youtube
Vimeo
Consent to display content from - Vimeo
Google Maps
Consent to display content from - Google
Spotify
Consent to display content from - Spotify
Sound Cloud
Consent to display content from - Sound