A Better Nights Sleep: The 3 Week Challenge

It all began a month or so before lockdown when I noticed how many sleep aids there were in the chemist. That same week I had four people contact me for help with sleep problems. 

This made me ask myself:

“What does psychological research and Hypnotherapy tell us about getting a good nights sleep?”

A positive psychological approach focuses on what makes people healthy rather than unhealthy. Instead of looking at the behaviour of someone who is struggling to get a good nights sleep, we should focus on the person who frequently sleeps well. How is the behaviour different? Can we copy it?

I began teaching people to use these psychological techniques alongside Hypnosis to nudge their sleep pattern. I was pleased to see the differences that could be made…but more people are needed to really see how effective it could be. 

Fancy a challenge? 

You need to apply the principles for the next three weeks and review the changes to your to sleep.  

Each principle usually takes only seven days to apply and you add the next principle the following week. 

Working through each stage you acquire the skills to undo the unhelpful behaviour you have been battling with and replace it with a positive alternative. 

You can also boost the results by adding a face to face Hypnotherapy session too.

The 3 Better Sleep Principles 

Wait… to maximise your success pick a time when you feel motivated. The more determined and focused you are the better. Grab that moment when you feel positive and determined and go for it!

Expectation

Task: Challenge the expectation that you will not sleep. 

Expectations are made up of our thoughts, experience and external information. In other words, what you think will happen, what has happened before and what other’s tell you is going to happen. 

We prime our behaviour based on previous experience: I couldn’t get to sleep last night. 

The experience creates a narrative in our thoughts to explain what happened: It must’ve been because I had coffee before I went to bed. 

The thought is justified by external information: That website said that drinking coffee in the evening can keep you awake. 

The explanations we create for ourselves are our thoughts. Those thoughts become a template for our mind to use the next time we are in a similar situation. 

Imagine our sleep-deprived person has, for example, a cup of coffee in the evening; they have a sinking feeling. The template created in their mind last time is activated: Oh no, I shouldn’t have had coffee. I won’t sleep now.

The thought and the template from before act as powerful suggestion: they are not going to sleep. When they struggle to sleep, that template is reinforced for next time. 

Unconscious suggestion and conditioning are achieved because an individual expects that something is going to happen. Each time that expectation is proved correct (through experience) it is reinforced and they behave in ways that maintain the expectation.

For example, they avoid drinking coffee in the evening to prevent it affecting their sleep. 

Unconscious and Auto-Suggestion

The unconscious mind is listening out for instructions (suggestions). Its desire is that you should have optimal functioning and is busy making sure that happens. All those automatic functions are controlled by your unconscious. We don’t consciously think about our heart beating or our kidneys working, it just happens. 

Even though you unconscious has got millions of tasks to complete every fraction of a second, it still has one ‘ear’ on the suggestions you create. It is paying attention to the instructions you give it. The thoughts we have and the behaviours we engage become the instructions (suggestions) for future automatic behaviours. 

There is a problem… it is too busy for the nuances of language. It is very black and white in the suggestions it acts upon. There are no grey areas. It either does or doesn’t. 

But…that’s okay our thoughts are always clear and our experience is never ambiguous, right? Hmmm, maybe not.

Our unconscious also doesn’t process negative suggestions. Negatives don’t stick in our have a rebound effect on us, regardless of what we consciously desire. 

The Law of Reversed Effort  

When there is a mismatch between what we want to happen and what we imagine will happen, the imagination always wins. So… you want to sleep well but you imagine (expect) not to and the imagination wins; you struggle to sleep. 

The task is to change you expectations to a strong belief that you will sleep well. Remember the person who routinely sleeps well does not spend time thinking about whether they will sleep tonight, they know they will. What they want to happen matches what they expect/imagine will happen; so it does. 

Proactive Thinking

While challenging your expectations you will spend quite a bit of time considering the suggestions you give your unconscious. This happens in a number of ways, but there are a few that you will need to consider closely:

  1. What we think informs the way we feel and the actions we take. The language that we use needs to be given careful consideration. It makes sense that if you tell yourself you are going to struggle to sleep, then chances are you will. The idea gives birth to the idea.  So …

Task: Catch the thoughts you have about sleeping and check they are not fuelling the idea that you will struggle to sleep

  1. You will also need to reword the thought. Negatives are a no-no! Any time you think about sleep, the thought should be a positively phrased statement of what we expect to happen. It is important to think about what is going to happen rather than what isn’t. A subtle difference but it makes all the difference.  Have a look at these examples:

“I don’t want to be awake all night again.”  or  “I won’t keep waking up tonight.”

On a first glance both thoughts seem positive but these thoughts are focused on what we  don’t want to happen. It would be more useful to think about what we do want to happen. 

“Tonight I will enjoy deep, sound sleep.” 

“I will sleep through and feel refreshed in the morning”

Task: Change the thoughts into proactive, positive language. You may find you are doing quite a bit at first, but catch and edit as many as you can

  1. Once you are thinking more proactively and positively about sleep, you will need to check that external things are not adding to a negative expectation of poor sleep. This is as subtle as the language and one that most of my clients find the most useful. 

Sticking with the idea that we are aiming to imitate the behaviour of the person who does not have a problem sleeping, challenge yourself to put all sleep aids in the draw for the duration of the challenge. 

An exception: If you have a condition such as sleep apnoea and use aids to assist with that condition, then you must continue to use that aid.

However…if you usually put essential oil on you pillow to help you sleep, leave it in the draw for the next three weeks. If you have been reading a self help guide (this one excluded!) on better sleep put it back on the bookshelf for the time being. If you would have avoided coffee or that glass of wine in the evening then enjoy a cup or glass if you want one for the next few weeks.

The challenge is to behave in the same way as someone who sleeps well. They don’t read books about sleep, or use sleep aids, because they don’t have a sleep problem. 

I would argue that engaging in those behaviours is a very powerful suggestion to the unconscious that you are not going to sleep. Why would you use those sleep aids unless you struggled to sleep? By inference, they suggest that you are going to struggle to sleep. 

Task: Put away the usual sleep aids unless they are for a medical condition  

Stress and Anxiety

Task: Apply relaxation techniques to manage stress and anxiety that may be an obstacle to good sleep.

The link between stress and poor sleep is hardly surprising.  The bodies way of dealing with stress is called The Fight or Flight Response. 

When our brain perceives that there is a threat in our environment, our nervous system is organised to release hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol, which prepare us to either deal with the stress head on (fight) or facilitate us getting away from it (flight). 

Physical changes occur as a result of the fight or flight response. Heart rate increases, the bronchial tubes dilate to allow more oxygen into the blood. The pupils dilate to let more light in through our eyes; all the better for seeing the threat. The liver releases glycogen so that we have more energy. All non-emergency biological functions are reduced and energy and focus is directed at dealing with the stress. 

The longer the individual is experiencing stress, the longer these functions are happening, and chronic stress has negative implications for our long-term health. The stress hormones have an arousing effect on the body, preparing us for action not sleep. So…

The more stress we are experiencing the more the body continues to produce stress hormones and our body is kept alert rather than relaxed for sleep. 

It may be useful to think of stress as external. The pressures in our lives add to our mental load. Work, relationships, financial concerns, health worries, for example, are identifiable external stresses even if we might struggle to manage them. 

“That stresses me out…but I can’t do anything about it”

Think of anxiety as internal stress. LINK TO POST  Stress that originates in you mind, an unconscious stress. Anxiety means you feel on-edge, fearful or depressed. It shows itself in symptoms like phobias and panic attacks. It can have a negative effect on physical conditions. 

Even when life seems to be treating you kindly and those things that would usually stress you out have reduced, you still feel anxious. Anxiety means your body is constantly in a state of alert. The stress response is being activated continually and adrenaline and cortisol are also having the arousing effect on the body.  

How many times have you felt like you ‘couldn’t switch off’ from everything that was going on? 

What action should I take?

Accumulate your ability to relax with ease. This will help to mediate the effects of stress and underlying anxiety. The idea is to manage the stress and anxiety have become an obstacle when you sleep. 

In Principle One I recommended avoiding methods that you use to sleep, but you may be aware that I didn’t mention the various apps and calm techniques or meditation. In terms of this challenge, if they help you relax (regardless of sleep) then that’s great. 

Guided relaxation, whether it be through self-hypnosis, meditation to mindfulness will help you to accumulate you ability (and belief) to relax. 

Key Point:  In terms of this challenge I suggest you avoid using them specifically at bedtime. See them as a relaxation training exercise not as an aid to sleep. Grab a little time to use them away from bedtime and trust in the fact you are developing the ability to relax and naturally enjoy deep, sound sleep. 

Why is this a key point? We continue to imitate the behaviour and beliefs of the person who sleeps well. They do not use such relaxation aids directly in relation to their sleep. They may use them for relaxation and self-development, but not because of a sleep problem, so we do the same. 

The face-to-face programme includes a personally tailored Hypnosis session which also includes post-hypnotic suggestions to increase your ability to relax.

What if I don’t usually use guided relaxation?

Could you give it a try? Alternatively, you could simply consider what kind of activity helps you relax and build that into your day as frequently as your schedule allows. 

One client would plan to go for a walk during the day. The time away from her desk allowed her to stop and relax. She was careful to make sure that it didn’t become stressful trying to fit it in to a busy day, but as saw the benefit, she soon was marking it in her diary with the same importance as a business meeting.

Remember the key is to acquire the ability to relax. Learn to relax in a way that works for you.  It could be reading, catching up with the TV programme or even chatting with a friend. Relaxing isn’t about sleeping, it’s a way to manage the stress and anxieties that keep your body and mind occupied when you go to bed. 

Anxiety and Hypnoanalysis

When anxieties are a particular problem and affect more than just your ability to sleep, you could consider Analytical Hypnotherapy (Hypnoanalysis). Working to resolve the underlying stubborn anxieties often results in improved sleep.  Contact me direct to find out more at www.ketteringhypnotherapy.com

Pre-existing Conditions

Task: Consider if there are other reasons you might struggle to sleep and seek help 

It is easy to become frustrated, particularly when you are sleep deprived, so it is important to take a moment to review other reasons your sleep is disturbed. Sometimes, I notice, clients have not thought about the logical reasons for their sleep problem which can be an obstacle to their efforts. 

When a person is suffering with chronic pain, on-going mental health conditions and even the menopause, there is quite often a reasonable explanation for their sleeping problem. Seeking advice from your doctor is a proactive step. In some cases Hypnotherapy can help manage the situation and support you to better sleep. You are being proactive to review your situation and seek out the assistance you need. 

Key Point: You may still benefit from principals one and two, but results may differ because of those pre-existing conditions. The key it to be proactive: apply the principles and review the results, ask for help where required rather than stopping altogether. Believe that you can benefit from challenging unhelpful expectations around sleep. Take control of the progress you make and take control of asking for support when it would help. 

Take the Challenge: Two Options:

  1. Apply the principles yourself. The information is here for free, but it would great to know how you got on! Let me know!
  1. Maximise the challenge with the support of a face-to-face Hypnotherapy session. We work through the principals together and combine them with Hypnosis so you learn how to relax easily.  

3 Principles   –   3 Weeks   –   3 Sessions

Book a free initial consultation at www.ketteringhypnotherapy.com

Negative Thinking? Question the Evidence

In my blogpost Anxiety: The Mind’s Fake News, I explained how anxious and negative thoughts are largely based on false information. The fake mind news is the product of an overestimation of potential threat. We worry and feel stressed as a precaution to the perceived threat in our environment. 

Our mind tells us one thing and the reality is something different, but we better be on our guard because what if something bad were to happen.

It is difficult to grasp sometimes that this thought process is not always at a conscious level. Negative thinking creeps in and we were unaware of why we should feel that way. 

The fake negative warning signal comes from within our mind with the result being a conscious battle with the reality of the situation. 

The Burglar Alarm In Your Mind 

A teenage client of mine once described it as a burglar alarm going off but there was no burglar in the building. You look for evidence of an intruder but there is no-one. You take a moment to reset only for the alarm to sound, again with no observable reason. 

The added problem is that once that alarm has sounded several times, you begin to expect it to go off. You are watchful and any sound you focus on: is that the alarm? 

You begin to listen out for potential triggers for the alarm to sound. You want to understand why the alarm keeps sounding so you look for reasons. 

Soon you are thinking about that alarm ringing more than anything else… and yet you still do not know what it’s happening. 

Where is the evidence?

One of the first steps for the management of negative or anxious thinking is to stop and question the evidence. Ask yourself: how true is that? Where is the evidence? 

You know that negative/anxious thinking is based on false information. Challenge it with the evidence that shows it is wrong. Question yourself, challenge the thought. 

Stop! Dispute and Challenge

When a negative mindset creeps in, firstly put an obstacle in the way of it progressing. Stop. If you need to, say in your mind. Stop and ask yourself:

How helpful is it for me to think like that right now? 

How is that helping me in this situation right now?

The answer is, of course, that it isn’t helpful. There is no evidence that the negative thought, belief or anxiety is correct. The opposite is true. Recognise and remind yourself that it is fake news, it is the burglar alarm sounding without a reason for it. 

Dispute the false claims made by negative thinking or anxiety. Take a moment to remind yourself of the evidence you do have that proves it is false. Go through a prepared list of evidence from your day to day life and past experiences that prove that the anxiety and negative attitude are incorrect. 

Challenge the thoughts with more helpful ways of thoughts. How could you change that thought or that way of thinking so that it was more helpful to you? How could you rephrase it so that it made you feel positive rather than negative or anxious?

Low Self-Esteem: The Stop, Dispute and Challenge

I was tutoring 18-year-old Jack as he prepared for his A’level Psychology examination. He had completed the first year of his course with very respectable grades. From our lessons, it was obvious that he was a capable and conscientious student. He studied a lot during the week and completed many practice essays and exam papers for me to mark. 

Jack was very aware of how well he needed to do so that he would be able to go on to his chosen university course: forensic science. He had a tendency to check how much revision his fellow students were doing, as well as comparing his grades to those of his peers. 

It was clear to me that the only thing that would be an obstacle for Jack was his low-self esteem concerning his studies. He was capable and I did not doubt that he would perform well in his exams, and yet he didn’t seem to understand that. 

Two weeks before his exams as we revised the different ways researchers chose particular statistical tests, he threw his pen down sighed heavily, folded his arms and said: “It’s no good! I’ll never get it! I might as well give up now. I’m rubbish at this.”

I think he was somewhat surprised when I grinned and then started laughing. He began laughing too and then asked: “Why are you laughing?”

“Well, Jack,” I said, closing the textbook, “what you just said doesn’t make any sense. For starters, you say you will never understand it, but that isn’t correct. Think right back to the start of this course and you didn’t know any of the psychological theories, explanations and studies that now you know so well you could sit there and explain them to me in detail. Every step of this course you have had to learn new things, so of which are difficult, but you are smart enough to make sense of it.”

He began grinning, but I carried on…

“Now we know you are capable because we only have to look at your GCSE results. You did very well. You exceed your predicted grades. Next, you completed the first year of this course with a high grade and have continued to do well. Yes, this part of the course is tricky, but there is nothing to suggest that you are unable to master it. 

Perhaps the reason you are feeling frazzled in this way is that you are so close to your exams and you desperately want to do well. Perhaps you are exhausted because you are putting so many hours into your studies. Perhaps you are comparing yourself to other students in your class, which you know makes no difference to your overall grade. 

So… maybe get some sleep, relax and remind yourself of what you have achieved before. You can do this and you know you can. Forget about what everyone else is doing for now and ask yourself what would be more a more helpful way of thinking about it. 

That’s why I laughed…What do you reckon? Shall we get back to these statistics?”

Jack rolled his eyes at what he knew was ‘David’s Talking Too’ smiled and got back to revising. 

Taking out that ten minutes was all that Jack needed to go from catastrophising about his exams to calming down and getting focused. It was very straight forward for him, but the principles would be the same if was someone who was feeling nervous about that job interview, social event or even just having to make a difficult phone call. 

Stop, dispute with the evidence to the contrary and challenge with more positive action. 

Hypnoanalysis: Getting to Root Cause of Anxiety and Negativity

Hypnoanalysis is a type of analytical therapy that works through and resolves the emotional build-up which causes anxiety and negative thinking. The therapy works under the principle of cause and effect. For every effect there has to be a cause; a reason why this person suffers in the way they do. 

Rather than managing symptoms, the aim is to remove the psychological cause of anxiety and a negative mindset. Imagining being able to dispense with the management strategies you use to control your anxiety, because it no longer exists; without the possibility of symptom substitution. 

The process does not have to be a long-drawn-out process either. Most people can complete their therapy within 6 to 8 sessions. 

There is no reason to put up with anxiety that is negatively impacting your life. Imagine what your life would be like if you were free from the doubts and worries which have been an obstacle for so long. 

Find out more and book a free initial consultation at www.ketteringhypnotherapy.com or give me a call on 01536 350328

Trypanophobia – Fear of Needles

Explanation and Treatment

How do you feel about the idea of having a blood test?

How about the thought of the upcoming Covid-19 vaccination? 

For someone who has an extreme fear of needles in a medical setting (trypanophobia) answering those two questions would, most likely, have produced feelings of mild fear  even though they there are no needles near them. 

The phobia may have begun as aichophobia, the fear of sharp objects, but has substituted to focus on medical procedures and needles in particular. 

Like all phobias, trypanophobia is an irrational fear. The person suffering from the fear knows that it is irrational. Nevertheless, the fear, panic and a feeling of being out of control happens whether they try to suppress it or not. In fact, if they do try and suppress it then the extreme panic is usually stronger in intensity. 

Long-Term Effects

Being unable to have an injection, for example, means they are going to be unwilling to seek medical help for other problems, just in case they have to have an injection and/or a blood test. 

Women may fear becoming pregnant as this will mean lots of medical appointments, blood test and other procedures that may use a needle. 

Like all anxiety/phobias it begins to take over more and more of an individual’s life. The restriction placed upon their life increases over time, and remember this is irrational so it will also take over other seemingly unrelated aspects of their life. 

Like all anxiety related symptoms, phobias constantly change. The person who is under greater life stress will find that the phobia increases in intensity. Where once they experienced fear and panic when they actually had an injection, now just talking about it can lead to beginnings of a panic attack. 

A few things to consider…

Trigger Event or a Cause?

Clients with a phobia will often relate to me an incident which they believe is the cause of the problem. Sometimes it will be a medical procedure they had which made them particularly anxious, this may be very recent or it can be from many years ago. The important thing to consider is that even though they know there is nothing to be scared of the fear remains. 

What if that incident wasn’t the CAUSE of the phobia? What if it was the TRIGGER for an underlying anxiety? What if the phobia was an outward expression of an unconscious anxiety?

In my experience, a phobia is a symbolic representation of an inner anxiety. The person is quite likely to have had an experience in the formative years (not necessarily related to needles) and the emotion related to that incident is now being symbolic represented as their needle phobia. 

Sometimes the person may already consciously know what the experience is, but they haven’t processed (thought it through) properly because at the time they were particularly emotional and/or they were just too young to understand the experience. 

An example is needed…

Jane was a quiet and somewhat shy girl. At infant school she was diligent and eager to do well, but found the loud and boisterous behaviour of some of the boys in her class unsettling. She had become an easy target for the boy’s teasing. 

One day in particular, she had been teased a lot and understandably was feeling sad and a little fearful of them. During an afternoon maths lesson, a particular boy sat behind her in the class and took it upon himself to take his compass and poke Jane hard through the gap in the back of her chair. 

Jane shrieked and the pain and shock made her jump up. If this wasn’t embarrassing enough she ‘had an accident’. The rest of class seeing the puddle on the floor stared at her and she could hear a few sniggers. Jane’s shame and embarrassment continued as left the classroom and rush to the bathroom, and was intensified when at the end of the day the teacher handed a bag containing the wet underpants to Jane’s mother. 

Let’s imagine that she felt so embarrassed and shameful that she put it out of thoughts and ‘forgot about it’ over the next few weeks. This was a useful way for her mind to deal with it, after all if she didn’t remember it then she wouldn’t feel the shame and embarrassment again; but the emotion remains locked up inside her. 

Let’s move forward a few years…

Jane is now at secondary school and it is time for the TB vaccinations. She is standing in line listening to the silly scary stories from the other children. Could it be true, she thinks, that they use six needles? Surely, not…but waiting in line, Jane cannot help but feel a little nervous. 

As she sit’s down next to the smiling nurse and rolls her sleeve up she hears the girl in the next cubical crying. Jane begins to feel panicky. She feels hot and sweaty, the room looks fuzzy and as she faints she has the strange thought: ‘don’t wet yourself…’

So when Jane sits in front of me as an adult seeking help for her trypanophobia, she tells me how she knows when her phobia started… it was when she had her vaccination at school. She will even explain how embarrassed and ashamed she feels to be so scared when she has previously forced herself to have a blood test or injection of some kind. 

She is unlikely to make the connection between fainting while having her vaccination and the experience she had in infant school. One experience was a trigger for the other because is was a near-miss. 

Some What If’s

What if Jane were able to remember and think through that experience from infant school, but this time as an adult? What if she was able to see it for what it was, an experience that wasn’t her fault and something she doesn’t have to feel embarrassed about? What if Jane was able to feel the emotions she felt at the time once more and extinguish them? What if she could understanding where her phobia really came from?

Do you think she would still be afraid of needles?

Hypnoanalysis is a treatment that works to answer those ‘what if’s’

Hypnoanalysis

Hypnoanalysis is a type of analytical therapy which works through and resolves the emotional build up which cause phobias. The therapy works under the principal of cause and effect. For every effect (phobia) there has to be a cause; a reason why this person suffers in the way they do. 

Rather than managing symptoms, the aim is to remove the psychological cause of the phobia. The person will be able to dispense with the management strategies they use to control their phobia, because the phobia no longer exists; without the possibility of symptom substitution. 

The process does not have to be a long drawn out process either. Most people are able to complete their therapy within 6 to 8 sessions. 

There really is no reason to put up with a phobia that is negatively impacting your life. Imagine what your life would be like if your were free from that fear which has been an obstacle for so long. 

Find out more and book a free initial consultation at www.ketteringhypnotherapy.com or give me a call on 01536 350328

Stress: Ways of Coping

What is your ‘go to’ way to cope with stress? Perhaps you are someone who focuses on the problem itself. You might be someone who finds solace in focusing on the practical solutions to the situation. On the other hand, you may be someone who pays greater attention to dealing with the emotions created by the stressful events. You might feel that dealing with the emotions helps you see things in a clearer perspective. Perhaps you use both strategies?

The Research…

Research (Lazarus and Folkman, 1984) has distinguished between two types of coping that we use when faced with stressful situations. 

We call then coping styles because each one has a particular focus on coping with stress.  They are called problem focused and emotion focused coping. 

Problem Focused: Tackling the particular things that has been causing the stress. Often thought of as the practical solution. It asks the question: “What can be done practically to cope with the situation?” 

Emotion Focused: Tackling the emotions that are being created by the stressful situation. The focus is on reducing the emotional stress response. It asks the question: “Is how I’m feeling helping? What would be a more helpful way to respond to this?”

Double the benefit…

Clearly both coping styles are have their benefits. Using problem focused strategies are useful when the practical solutions are easily identifiable.  When clear decisions need to be made, or when the individual knows what needs to happen (no matter how difficult) dealing with the problem directly is often most helpful. 

Focusing on the problem and the possible practical actions to solve it, has the added benefit of giving us a greater sense of control over the situation. Being proactive allows us to take control of the stress response, which inevitably has the effect of reducing the emotions created by the situation. 

Emotion focused coping is much more helpful when the situation is more ambiguous and cannot be dealt with easily in a practical way. It’s also helpful when the practical solutions are not immediately solved. 

Focusing on the emotional response to the situation first, also has the benefit of creating a stronger feeling of control over the situation. When our emotions are heightened, we are unable to think clearly about the practical solutions. By focusing on reducing the negative emotional response, we can think more clearly and problem focused coping strategies are easier to use. 

Some Examples…

Alex has applied for a new job. It is a promotion and one that he is more capable of doing,  but he is not always the most confident person and has a tendency to be self-deprecating. It has taken a lot to even apply for the job. He is feeling stressed by the prospect of the interview.

He decides to do a few things to help:

He spends time preparing for the interview, highlighting from his application letter the particular things he wants to draw attention to. He sets aside time in his week to brainstorm the skills and experience he thinks are particularly useful and that he can expand on in the interview. He researches the company and their mission statement  making notes about how he could show he would fit well into the company. All of this is focused on the causes of the stress (problem focused).

Alex also uses a relaxation app on his phone to practise some breathing exercises. These help him feel calm. During the week he reminds himself of the calming words from the relaxation, which helps him feel more positive about the interview. Emotion focused, helping him feel more positive. 

As part of his preparations, Alex’s girlfriend runs through some mock questions for the interview. The rehearsing helps him realise that he can answer the questions which increases his self-confidence. His girlfriend also challenges the negative things he says about the interview process to help him see that he can be successful. This includes emotion and problem focused coping strategies. It also includes social support, which is particularly helpful when dealing with stress. 

Social Support: the magic bullet to coping with stress…

Perhaps unsurprisingly, having support from others is beneficial whichever style of coping you prefer. Support from friends and family can come from them having a different perspective of the problem. They are not emotionally involved in the situation which means they can be a good sounding board for the possible solutions (enhancing problem focused coping). 

The support from your friendship group also helps you cope with the emotions you feel as a result of the stressful situation. You talk about them and, as the old saying goes, a problem shared is a problem halved. This helps you think through things more clearly and decide on appropriate action: social support enhancing both emotion and problem focused coping. 

Interesting to note… that research (Kiecolt-Glasner et. al., 1984) showed that the higher stress someone experienced, the more likely they were to have a reduced immune system response (NK cell activity), which goes some way to explaining stress related illness. 

But also… a lack of social support contributed to that negative effect: the lower social support, the lower NK cell activity. 

More than just thinking positive thoughts

Application: What are the lessons?

  • If the situation has created a HIGH level of emotion, this should be dealt with FIRST. Excess emotion will stop you being able to identify the practical actions that need to be taken. The emotion stops you seeing ‘the wood for the trees’!
  • STOP! Take stock of what practical actions you could take to deal with the situation. It doesn’t matter how small the actions are, they will take you away from the catastrophising of the situation and focus on what can be done right now. Take your time deciding what action needs to be taken, remember problem focused coping should not be led by the emotions of the moment. 
  • What emotions have been created? STOP and deal with those. Calm down, and ask yourself if your emotional response is accurate given the situation. What social support have you at your disposal? Run the problem past someone else and see what they think. They are not feeling the same emotions that you are, they will no doubt see it in a way that you are unable to at that moment. 

Benefit of combing Hypnotherapy and Coaching Techniques

Coaching provides you with a sounding board to discuss, organise and activate different ways of dealing with stressful situations. Working together we identify the most useful and effective ways for you to take the steps towards tackling the problem.

Through a supportive and personalised approach we work together to put in place the necessary elements that will help you to focus overcoming the current obstacle.

I will introduce you to the use of hypnosis as a tool to help maximise your efforts. Learning how to use focused relaxation and real positive suggestion, you can acquire the skills of how to re-programme your thinking and challenge the obstacles which have previously prevented you from succeeding. 

Hypnosis is a great way of dealing with the emotions created by stressful situations, and when combined with coaching techniques, you are able to act on the practical solutions to deal with the stresses in your life. 

For a free initial consultation call 01536 350328 or visit www.ketteringhypnotherapy.com

References

Lazarus, R.S. and Folkman, S. (1984). Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York: Springer

Kiecolt-Glaser, J.K., Garner, W., Speicher, C.E., Penn, G.M., Holliday, J. and Glaser, R. (1984). Psychosocial modifiers of immunocompetence in medical students. Psychosomatic Medicine, 46, 7-14