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Hypnotherapy for Anxiety

When your mind doesn’t switch off, your body stays "on"… and living in a constant state of alert starts to feel normal. Many people come here because they’re experiencing anxiety.

For example:

– a racing mind
– difficulty switching off
– constant tension
– excessive worry
– feeling exhausted, even when you try to rest

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Nicole Farinha, certified hypnotherapist, supporting emotional healing and inner safety

Hypnotherapist & Transpersonal Therapist

My name is Nicole Farinha, and I help adults understand and transform old emotional patterns that continue to shape their lives.

The approach I use has helped thousands of high-achieving individuals gain clarity, feel more free, and move forward with confidence — so they can reach their full potential and thrive in their lives.

30 min Free Consultation

What’s behind anxiety

But often, what we call anxiety isn’t just “anxiety.”

It’s a nervous system in a state of chronic hypervigilance.

It’s the body operating as if it still needs to anticipate, control, or protect itself from something that might go wrong.

When this continues over time, anxiety stops being just a symptom.

It becomes a way your system functions.

Anxiety can show up in many different ways:

Anxiety can show up in many different ways:

– racing thoughts
– a constant sense of urgency
– difficulty relaxing
– tension in the body
– irritability or feeling overwhelmed
– difficulty sleeping deeply
– a persistent sense that something might go wrong

Hypnotherapy sessions for anxiety and panic attacks in a calm, private setting

Anxiety: it’s not always just stress or overwork

Often, anxiety is explained as:

– stress
– overwork
– a personality trait

But in many cases, anxiety is not just that.

It’s the reflection of a nervous system that has learned to live in a constant state of alert.

Not because you’re weak.

But because, at some point in your life, being alert felt safer than trusting.

When anxiety didn’t start recently

Not all anxiety begins in adulthood.

Many anxious patterns are linked to what we call developmental trauma.

It doesn’t have to be something dramatic.

Sometimes, it’s simply growing up in an environment where, consistently:

– you had to stay alert all the time
– you had to anticipate other people’s reactions
– you had to keep everything “stable”
– you had to adapt emotionally too early

These patterns don’t just disappear over time.

They follow us into adulthood and shape the way we respond to the world.

The body learns something simple:

– being on alert feels safer than relaxing

And that stays.

What is developmental trauma (and why it’s more common than it seems)

The word “trauma” is often associated with extreme events.

But in psychology and neuroscience, trauma can be subtle, repeated, and invisible.

It can develop when a child grows up in an environment where, consistently:

– they need to stay highly aware of the emotional environment
– they learn to anticipate conflict or other people’s reactions

– they feel responsible for keeping everything stable around them
– they grow up emotionally too quickly
– they learn that being responsible or pleasing others is how they are accepted

In some cases, the environment may be:

– unpredictable
– emotionally centered around the adults

– with little space for the child’s own needs

It doesn’t have to be dramatic to leave an impact.
It just needs to be consistent.

What the nervous system learns

In these environments, the body learns something very simple:

Being on alert feels safer than relaxing.

And over time, this stops being a reaction…
and becomes an automatic pattern.

How this shows up in adult life

What started as an intelligent adaptation can show up as:

– persistent anxiety
– feeling like you’re always “on”
– hypervigilance
– difficulty switching off or relaxing
– constant thinking
– tension in the body without a clear reason

The science behind anxiety

Research in trauma and neuroscience shows that:

Early emotional experiences deeply shape how the nervous system responds to stress and safety throughout life.

(van der Kolk, 2014; Schore, 2003)

This means something important:

Your body is not “broken.”
It’s simply repeating what it learned to protect you.

What happens in the nervous system

When the nervous system stays in a state of alert for too long, it loses flexibility to return to rest and a sense of safety.

This can show up as:

– a constantly active mind
– difficulty relaxing deeply
– a persistent sense of internal alert
– heightened sensitivity to the environment or other people’s emotions
– difficulty feeling truly safe, even in safe situations

Why this happens

When the body becomes used to being on alert, the mind tries to compensate by creating predictability.

This can lead to patterns such as:

– the need to anticipate what might happen

– the need to control situations

– constant planning to prevent something from going wrong

– difficulty dealing with uncertainty or unpredictability

Over time, these patterns become automatic.

They are not conscious choices — they are learned responses.

What’s happening underneath (neuroscience)

This state is linked to a prolonged activation of the body’s defense systems.

The nervous system is constantly evaluating:

– am I safe?
– do I need to act?
– do I need to protect myself?

According to Polyvagal Theory, we move between:

– safety
– alert
– defense

When the state of alert becomes constant, the body loses the ability to naturally return to relaxation.

That’s why many people describe it like this:

“I know everything’s fine… but my body doesn’t believe it.”

The key point

Anxiety doesn’t always start in your thoughts.

Often, it begins in the body.

It’s a learned physiological state — not a personal failure.

That’s why working only at a rational level is not always enough.

How hypnotherapy works at the root of anxiety

When anxiety is linked to deeper patterns in the nervous system and developmental history, therapeutic work needs to go beyond symptom management.

Hypnotherapy allows us to work directly with:

– unconscious processes
– nervous system regulation
– automatic emotional patterns

Instead of simply trying to “calm the mind,” the work happens at the level where these patterns were formed.

In the therapeutic process, we explore:

– patterns of hypervigilance and protection
– the body’s automatic responses
– past experiences that continue to influence the present
– the gradual rebuilding of a sense of internal safety

This isn’t about reliving the past.

It’s about updating how your body responds in the present.

calm, open space representing support for anxiety and panic through hypnotherapy

In the therapeutic process, we explore:

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Internal patterns of vigilance and protection
Imagine Heal Hypnotherapy Symbol
Developmental experiences that continue to shape the present
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Outdated adaptation patterns that are no longer needed today
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Gradual rebuilding of internal safety

It’s not about reliving the past.

It’s about giving your system the conditions to reprocess those experiences and reorganise the way they continue — often at an unconscious level — to shape your reactions, decisions, and identity in the present.

When the nervous system updates these patterns, it stops reacting as if it were still in that past context.

And this allows something simple — yet deeply transformative:

living with more internal space, without needing to remain in constant alert.

Who this hypnotherapy approach for anxiety is for

– people experiencing persistent anxiety

– those living with constant internal tension

– those who “function well on the outside,” but feel overwhelmed on the inside

– those who have already tried to control their mind… without success

– those who want to understand and transform the root of the pattern

– those who are available for a therapeutic process

Results of hypnotherapy sessions

Who this is not for

– those looking only for quick relaxation techniques
– those wanting instant solutions without exploring deeper internal patterns
– those not available for a structured therapeutic process

A meta-analysis published in 2019, reviewing multiple clinical studies on hypnosis and anxiety, found significant reductions in anxiety levels compared to control groups — supporting the therapeutic potential of hypnosis in clinical contexts.

FAQ

Yes. Hypnotherapy can be helpful when anxiety is linked to hypervigilance, persistent emotional patterns, and difficulty feeling internal safety.

By working with focused attention and deep relaxation states, it becomes possible to access unconscious processes and automatic nervous system responses that often keep anxiety active.

Research suggests that hypnosis can contribute to significant reductions in anxiety levels, particularly when integrated into a structured therapeutic process.

Many people with anxiety also experience a strong need to anticipate or control what might happen.

In many cases, this is linked to a nervous system that has learned to live in a state of alert.
When the body stays in hypervigilance for long periods, trying to predict or control situations can become a way of creating safety.

Over time, this strategy can turn into an automatic pattern of functioning — even when the current context no longer requires that level of control.

Therapeutic work helps the nervous system regain flexibility, allowing you to move through life with more confidence and less need for constant control.

Difficulty dealing with uncertainty is a very common experience for people living with persistent anxiety.

When the nervous system becomes used to anticipating risk or unpredictability, the mind may develop patterns like constant planning or attempts to control outcomes — as a way to prevent something from going wrong.

These strategies develop as forms of protection.
But when they become constant, they can keep the body in tension and alert.

By working directly with nervous system regulation and deeper emotional patterns, it becomes possible to build a greater tolerance for uncertainty and restore a sense of internal safety.

Not necessarily.

Although thoughts play an important role, anxiety also involves the body, the nervous system, and unconscious processes that shape how we respond to the world.

That’s why many people notice that simply “trying to think differently” isn’t enough to shift persistent anxiety patterns.

No.

Hypnotherapy works primarily at the level of the nervous system and the unconscious processes that sustain emotional and behavioural patterns.

It is not an approach focused only on conversation (“talk therapy”) or cognitive analysis.
For this reason, it can complement an ongoing psychotherapy process.

Some people choose to continue both approaches for a period of time. Others naturally adjust over time, as they begin to notice changes in their internal regulation and greater emotional clarity.

The decision is always individual and should reflect each person’s personal and therapeutic timing.

No.

During hypnosis, you remain aware, present, and able to make decisions.

The goal of the process is not to take control away, but to allow access to states of greater regulation, focus, and connection with internal resources that are not as easily available in a constant state of mental alert.

Sometimes, yes — when it is relevant to understanding current patterns.

Many anxiety patterns are linked to developmental experiences that shaped how the nervous system learned to feel safe in relationships and in the world.

When these experiences are explored in a therapeutic context, the goal is not to relive the past, but to update how it is held — and to reorganise the way these learnings continue to influence decisions, reactions, and identity in the present.

As the nervous system updates these responses, it no longer reacts as if it were still in that past context.

And this allows something simple — and deeply meaningful:
to move through life with more ease, without losing your strength.

Some of the most widely referenced scientific sources include:

Valentine, K., Milling, L., Clark, L., & Moriarty, C. (2019).
Hypnosis as a treatment for anxiety: A meta-analysis.

van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score.

Schore, A. (2003). Affect Regulation and the Repair of the Self.

Porges, S. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory.

When to consider hypnotherapy for anxiety

If anxiety no longer feels occasional…
but more like a constant state you’re living in,
it may be the right time to look deeper.

Maybe this isn’t something to simply “manage.”

Maybe it’s something to understand… and transform.

You can book a free 30-minute consultation,
and we’ll explore together what’s really driving your anxiety.

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