There is a voice that many women carry quietly within themselves. Not always loud, not always obvious, but present in the moments that matter most.
It appears just before you speak, when you are about to make a decision or when you are being seen. A subtle contraction, a quiet questioning, a sense that something about you is not quite enough. This is often what we call the inner critic.
And while you may understand it – where it comes from, why it developed, it can still feel difficult to change, because some patterns are not held only in the conscious mind. This is where hypnotherapy begins to offer something different.
What is Hypnotherapy?
Hypnotherapy is a type of therapy that uses hypnosis to help access the subconscious mind and create change on a deeper level. Hypnosis is a natural state of focused attention; it is a state of awareness where your mind becomes quieter, and your attention turns inward.
In this state, you are not asleep; you are not unconscious, and hypnotherapy is not about losing control. In fact, hypnotherapy is not mind control – it is a guided process where the client remains aware and engaged. This state is also known as a hypnotic state, and it allows a person to become more receptive to suggestions that can help shift thoughts, feelings and behaviours.
Hypnosis and hypnotherapy have been used in different forms for many years, and modern clinical hypnosis is now widely recognised as a supportive approach for mental health and emotional wellbeing.
Hypnosis and Hypnotherapy: What’s the Difference?
It is helpful to understand the distinction between hypnosis and hypnotherapy. Hypnosis is a state of focused attention and heightened awareness, and hypnotherapy is a therapeutic process that uses this state to help create change
In other words, hypnosis is the state, and hypnotherapy is what we do with it. A hypnotherapist guides you into this state and works with you to address patterns that may be affecting your life.
How Hypnotherapy Works with the Brain
During hypnosis, the brain enters a more relaxed and focused mode. Research has found that in this state, the critical, analytical part of the mind softens, the subconscious becomes more accessible, and new ways of thinking can be introduced more easily
This is important because many of our automatic reactions, beliefs, and emotional responses are stored in the subconscious mind. That is why hypnotherapy can help where other approaches may feel limited. It allows you to work directly with the part of the mind where patterns are held.
How Hypnotherapy Helps with Self-Worth
When it comes to self-worth therapy, one of the main challenges is that negative beliefs are often deeply ingrained. They are not just thoughts; they are patterns that have been repeated over time. You may logically know that you are capable, worthy, or enough and still feel the opposite in certain situations. This is because those responses are not only conscious, they are embedded.
Hypnotherapy for self-worth works by gently accessing these deeper layers. A hypnotherapy session can help you identify limiting beliefs, shift negative patterns, develop more supportive internal responses and reconnect with a more stable sense of self. Over time, this can help reduce the intensity of the inner critic and create a more balanced inner dialogue.
What Happens During a Hypnotherapy Session?
A hypnotherapy session usually begins with a conversation. This allows the therapist to understand what you would like to work on and what patterns may be present. From there, you are guided into a relaxed state of hypnosis.
During hypnosis, your body becomes calm, your mind becomes focused, and your awareness turns inward. In this state, the hypnotherapist may use: guided imagery, positive suggestion, therapeutic language, and gentle exploration of thoughts and feelings
The client remains aware throughout – you can hear everything, you can respond if needed, you are always in control.
What Does It Feel Like to Be in a Hypnotic State?
Many people are surprised by how natural hypnosis feels. You may experience: a sense of calm, reduced overthinking, a feeling of being deeply present, a gentle detachment from external distractions
It can feel similar to daydreaming, being absorbed in a book or the moments just before falling asleep. This is a state of focused attention, not unconsciousness, and it is within this state that deeper work can take place.
Online Hypnotherapy: Can It Really Work?
A common question is whether online hypnotherapy can be as effective as in-person sessions; the answer is yes. In many cases, it can even enhance the experience, because you are in your own environment. You may feel safer, more relaxed and less self-conscious
This allows the body to settle more easily into the hypnotic state, and when the body feels safe, the mind becomes more open. This is especially important when working with sensitive areas such as self-worth.
Hypnotherapy for Women: A Deeper Layer of Work
Hypnotherapy for women often focuses on patterns that are subtle but deeply impactful, such as self-doubt, overthinking, perfectionism, people-pleasing, and fear of being judged. These patterns are often connected to earlier experiences and learned responses.
They are not always logical, and they are not always easy to change through thinking alone. This is why hypnotherapy can be such a valuable tool; it allows you to work with these patterns at the level where they were formed.
Can Hypnotherapy Be Used for Other Conditions?
Yes, hypnotherapy can be used to support a range of mental and physical conditions. It has been used to help with anxiety and stress, phobias, sleep issues, irritable bowel syndrome, pain management, and habits such as smoking.
Hypnotherapy can also help with symptoms of emotional distress and support overall mental health. It is often used alongside other approaches, such as cognitive behavioral therapy.
Is Hypnotherapy Safe?
Hypnotherapy is generally considered safe when practised by a trained professional. There are minimal side effects, and most people experience it as a relaxing and positive process. However, it is important to work with a hypnotherapist who is qualified and experienced, as this ensures that the process is supportive, ethical, and appropriate for your needs.
A Different Experience of Change
What makes hypnotherapy different is not just the technique; it is the experience of change. Rather than trying to force new ways of thinking, you begin to notice shifts happening more naturally – situations that once triggered self-doubt may feel less intense, and the inner critic may become quieter, there may be more space within your thoughts and feelings.
This is not about becoming someone new, it is about accessing parts of yourself that were already there – but not fully available.
A Deeper Way to Work with Self-Worth
For some, individual sessions are enough to create meaningful change; for others, a more structured approach may be needed. This is where deeper work, such as a self-worth-focused programme, becomes relevant.
A process like Self Worth Revival allows you to: work consistently with your subconscious patterns, build a stronger sense of self-worth over time and integrate changes more fully into your life. It is not about quick results; it is about lasting transformation.
A Gentle Invitation
If you recognise yourself in this – in the inner critic, the self-doubt, the quiet tension within – it may be a sign that you are ready for a different approach. Online hypnotherapy offers a space where this work can begin.
You don’t need to force change; you don’t need to have everything figured out. Sometimes, it starts with a willingness to enter a different state…
and allow something new to emerge.
If You Are Considering Hypnotherapy
If you are thinking about trying hypnotherapy, you may want to learn more about how it works, explore whether this type of therapy feels right for you, find a qualified hypnotherapist and begin with a single session. Hypnotherapy can help you reconnect with yourself in a way that feels deeper, calmer, and more aligned.
