Woman and Home - 17 June 2020
Anxiety is usually experienced by less than 10% of the UK population at any given time, but with the burgeoning health crisis many are finding that their worries are becoming bigger than before.
Many of the people suffering with anxiety, whether through personal stressors like relationships and financials or worldly stresses like pandemic, probably won't have considered hypnosis as feasible option for their distress.
As Susan, expert hypnotherapist, puts it, 'People think 'I'm just an anxious person so I [have to] accept it'. No not at all. The number of times I've heard that said, 100 per cent you don't.'
Hypnosis is often portrayed in film and media as sending someone into a trance, but a hypnosis session us about so much more than that. Our experts are here explain exactly how hypnosis can help with anxiety, how it works and whether it could work for you'
How does hypnosis work?
One of the most nerve-wracking things about going for a new treatment is not knowing what to expect. Here hypnotherapist and psychotherapist Susan Hepburn, who has helped A-listers such as Adele and Nigella Lawson, tells us how a hypnosis session might work.
1. Working out where anxieties have come from
Susan explains that working out where anxieties have come from is the first step to solving them.
'I get their story line about their life basically ' where the anxieties have come from and how they started out.' She says, 'Anxieties sometimes from other people of course, as a reaction to a partner or children or parents. I find out where it came from, when it started out and how when it first happened, if they can recall, they coped with it at the time.'
2. Relaxation
And then she goes on to encourage relaxation. 'They just lie down and get nice and comfortable. It takes about seven or eight minutes to relax.' hypnosis for anxiety
3. Hypnosis
Unlike what we have all seen in films and television shows, there is no swinging watch or trance-like state where you enter only to not remember where you've been.
'Then when I hypnotise them,' Susan goes on, 'I talk about the story line. I take down the anxieties and where they come from. [And] I take those out. It's like deleting files on a computer; I delete files in that person's subconscious mind, because no one is pre-destined to have anxieties. It's impossible. It's become learned behaviour and that's where the treatment comes into play, to change those learned behaviour patterns.'
While this might be what happens in regular hypnotherapy sessions, Susan says that she personally goes beyond that.
'I'm going to go one step further and do a clean sweep of your entire subconscious mind, deleting all the links and ties in associating yourself with any form of anxiety. I ask what their achievements are in life and we talk about those. So I say, 'you've achieved XYZ so you're going to use those same qualities, the same determination to ensure you're going to have success with this too. My motto is always, 'failure is not an option and you'll succeed at this'.'
However, although concepts such as relaxation and identifying anxieties are a common part of hypnosis, a session will be create to suit the individual.
As internationally renowned hypnotherapist, Sheila Granger tells woman&home, 'The session is tailored to the person and what their issue is and what they want to achieve. How they want life to be.'
How can hypnosis help anxiety?
Due to the misconceptions around hypnosis in society, many people often go into the practice believing it's going to be something it isn't. Susan clears up what the aim of hypnosis for anxiety is. She says that's it's 'to be in control of anxieties and emotions, to have no anxiety at all, to get rid of it completely' and while to some this may sound too good to be true, Susan reiterates that we're not born with anxiety. It's a learned behaviour.
'I always say to everyone, 'you're born with self-confidence, self-esteem, self-worth, self-belief'. As you're growing up through childhood and teenage years, you're developing all the time through teachers, parents and siblings. But they [the positive feelings about yourself] get chipped away through situations and relationships, trauma, dramas and so on.
'My role is to find those [positive] emotions and bring them to the surface, but [also] to remove the misconceptions about things that have happened and why their anxiety has arisen.'
Susan explains that she takes these misconceptions and anxieties out because 'it's a negative file' and in that way, you can live without anxiety. This idea of upgrading thinking patterns is common across the practice of hypnosis. Sheila says that while hypnosis isn't suitable for those with serious mental health disorders, like clinical depression, it can be hugely beneficial for those with both general and acute anxiety. In turn, it can help those who struggle with insomnia to sleep better and improve their overall health.
'What hypnotherapy does is it looks to almost upgrade somebody's thinking about something and more importantly, how somebody reacts to something. With anxiety, it's mainly about accepting that we cannot change what is happening around us. We have no control over that but we can find a way to control how we react to it and if we do that, it takes us out of a continual flight or fight response.'
But she says this is nothing new. 'All the techniques we teach, there's nothing new. They're all techniques that professional sports people will use, they will visualise how they want the game to go, how to get rid of the negative self-talk. Every one of us could benefit from that kind of thinking.'
For those who feel anxious about situations might find it difficult to believe that meditative thinking can be a positive step on their way to eradicating anxiety for good.
But as Sheila explains, 'Self-hypnosis requires practice and people think if they can't do it the first time around then it's not going to be something for me. But as human beings, whatever we practice we become good at.'
Although traditionally hypnosis isn't available on the NHS, they do suggest that you talk to your GP or ask your local Clinical Commissioning Group about the possibility of treatment.
While hypnosis might not work for everyone with anxiety, our experts agree that everyone can learn something from the experience about how they deal with stress and anxiety from hypnosis.
As can be proved in the clinical trial above, hypnosis cures anxiety for almost 100% of patients. Anxiety letf on its own can lead to panic atacks and depression and is a life enjoyment limiting condition. At the Harley Street Hypnotherapy Clinic in London, we treat clients with anxiety hypnosis with great success. Our hypnotherapists also specialise in treating panic attacks and depression with hypnosis.