Hypnotherapy therapists in Rutherglen, Scotland Scotland, United Kingdom GB
We are proud to feature top rated Hypnotherapy therapists in Rutherglen, Scotland, United Kingdom. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Vanessa East
Counsellor/Therapist
I am a qualified hypnotherapist and work with all issues from anxiety through chronic pain, to trauma and abusive relationships. For further information, please do get in contact.
6 Years Experience
Online in Rutherglen, Scotland
Dr Ian Anderson
Psychologist, Consultant Clinical Psychologist (HCPC registered), PhD, MSc, MSc, MSc, MA (Econ), BA (Econ) Hons
I am a member of the British Society of Clinical & Academic Hypnosis (BSCAH). My approach is to make a thorough assessment of an individual's difficulties and decide whether hypnosis is an appropriate therapy. If it is, I am happy to treat the individual by this means, but there are occasions in which I can identify more effective treatments.
44 Years Experience
Online in Rutherglen, Scotland
Joel Cantor, Weybridge Hypnotherapy & Mindfulness
Therapist, MCH, BSc(hons), SQHP
Hypnotherapy is the perhaps the most effective way of accessing the Subconscious mind and is therefore an extremely useful part of my practice.
12 Years Experience
Online in Rutherglen, Scotland
Solutions Counselling
Registered Psychotherapist, Prof.Dip.Psy.C
I started my counselling career as a Clinical Hypnotherapist and am a member of BSCH. It is a much misunderstood and powerful tools that can lead to rapid transformation and healing. It does not mean that you will lose control of your decisions and actions, rather you will be able to harness the deep resources of your mind and imagination to bring healing and wellbeing.
29 Years Experience
Online in Rutherglen, Scotland
Sara Aicart-Pendlebury
Art Therapist, Human Givens Practitioner (HG.Dip.P), Member of Human Givens Institute, IFS therapist Levels 1&2, Narm Practitioner
All forms of mental distress arise because, in one way or another, people’s physical or emotional needs are not being met. Our essential needs and our innate resources to help meet them – the ‘givens’ of human nature – are at the heart of the human givens approach. If all our needs are met in balance, making us confident about our place in the world and the people we connect with, we don’t suffer from disabling conditions, such as anxiety and stress, depression, addictions, phobias or panic attacks.
We all know that we have physical needs – for food, water, warmth and shelter – which must be sufficiently met to enable us to survive and thrive. But people often don’t realise that certain emotional needs are just as crucial for both our mental and physical health. Decades of health and social research have revealed, for instance, that a sense of security, intimacy, social connection, status, autonomy and control, competence and achievement, and meaning and purpose are also vital, if we are to stay in good health and feel fulfilled in our lives. Our innate resources for helping us meet these needs include the ability to build rapport, empathise and connect with others; to learn, problem solve, remember and plan; to use our imaginations productively; and to step back and take an objective look at our circumstances. When any of our important needs is seriously unmet over a significant period or any of our resources is not made best use of, mental and physical ill health may develop.
This is why, when human givens practitioners work with people in mental distress, they look for what is missing in those people’s lives and seek ways to redress that, as well as teaching them important life-coping skills.
15 Years Experience
Online in Rutherglen, Scotland