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'Excellent treatment, friendly and relaxed environment allowed me to face my fear and enjoy future flights. Thank you very much.' Flying Phobia - Miss J.G. Leigh on seaRead More...
Hypnotherapy Thundersley - Southend
We Are Very Pleased To Welcome Residents Of Thundersley For Hypnosis In Southend.
Whatever your reason for visiting us from the Thundersley area, we hope you will find this site helpful.
We use Hypnosis in conjunction with Ideo-Dynamic Repatterning (IDR) a very effective technique that achieves profound results in a very short period of time, often
requiring only half the amount of sessions compared to using traditional hypnotherapy methods alone.
Call us FREE on 0800 999 4245 or use the contact form to discover how we can help you overcome whatever is holding you back in life.
We offer an initial hypnotherapy consultation Free Of Charge*, with no obligation to take it further. When you are happy we can help you, then we can agree a mutually convenient time for you to enjoy a relaxing therapy session. We can either meet you at our busy Hypnotherapy practice in Southend-on-sea Essex or visit you at your own home in and around Thundersley, Essex.
Please click here to visit our main page or use the menu above to find answers to commonly asked questions, information on fees and everything else you need to know.
Below is detailed instructions on travelling from Thundersley and where to find us.
Mindfulness, an old Buddhist practice, has gained an importance in psychotherapy such as in Hakomi, cognitive therapy or in 'Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction'.Mindfulness is described as being composed of four essential components: (1) attention, concentration, meta-awareness, (2) the internal observer and disidentification, (3) attention to the present moment and beginner's mind, (4) acceptance, equanimity and nonjudging. Hypnosis and mindfulness relate to each other in a complementary way in many dimensions and create spectrums between: (1) absorption - open awareness, (2) dissociation - disidentification, (3) suggestibility - consensus consciousness - awakening, (4) goal- and change-orientation - exploration - equanimity and acceptance, (5) lack of consciousness - hidden observer - in...
Light and sound effects have frequently been used for the induction of altered states of consciousness. Turning on and off light or sound leads to short-term excitation of the central nervous system, while longer lasting stimulation has led to drowsiness and mixed alpha-theta activity and to bodily relaxation with increased skin resistance, decreased EMG activity and a decreased salivary cortisol level; though an increased salivary IgA level and output of the salivary chaperone Hsp70 have also been reported. At the same time a strong trance inducing ability of photic stimulation (10 min) has been demonstrated. In open clinical studies orofacial psychosomatic patients have been treated: Atypical facial pain (n = 20) recovered in 34.9 %, improvement occurred in 40.4 %, with no effect in 24.7...
Although the concept of 'lucid dreaming' was first coined by Frederik Willems van Eeden, a Dutch psychiatrist, and introduced at the meeting of The Society for Psychical Research held on 22 April 1913, the phenomenon of lucid dreaming was already known in earlier historical periods and its descriptions can be found in writings of Aristotle. However, modern lucid dreaming research was established only after LaBerge introduced his method for physiological investigation of lucid dreaming through eye signals in 1980. Current attempts in the field are directed at defining the neuro-physiological correlates of lucid dreaming, an aim that still has yet to be achieved. One of the possible applications of lucid dreaming is in the field of psychotherapy where it is usually used in treating nightmare...
This study examines the rate of late-preterm birth in a hypnosis group (directed to all women) and a historical control group. From July 2007 all women (n = 64), who were in their 28th to 34th weeks' gestation, were offered self-hypnosis training using the hypnoreflexogenous protocol after Hüsken-Janßen and Schauble. Expectant mothers with uncertain anticipated days of delivery were excluded. All women who delivered after 31 weeks' gestation served as a control group (n = 2135) from January 2006 till June 2007. In the hypnosis group there were three preterm deliveries (4.7%) (before 37 + 0 weeks' gestation) whereas in the control group there were 220 preterm deliveries (10.3%) (p = 0.01). Average cigarette usage during the current pregnancy was lower in the hypnosis group (p = 0.02). Hig...
D McCarthy Dip.Hyp.GQHP.GHR.Reg.
Registered with The General Hypnotherapy Register &
The Hypnotherapy Association
Fully Insured
Screened by the Criminal Records Bureau (CRB)
Telephone 01702 619996