Aug 10

How To Get Unstuck

Posted in Background

When Sarah James is famous, you’ll be able to say that you saw me interview her, back when.

Sarah is one of my clients, and she very kindly and completely spontaneously offered to let me interview her about her personal growth journey from disintegration to integration, and how working with me has contributed to that journey. She originally came to me to stop smoking, but (as you’ll hear) it turned into much more than that.

I’ve split the interview into 4 short videos, totalling about 20 minutes. If you want just the audio, you can download it here.

In part 1, you’ll hear:

  • why a 38-year-old single mother-of-two and aspiring actress thinks it worthwhile to spend her scarce time and money working on personal development,
  • how smoking was a way for her to avoid herself and the circumstances of her life,
  • how she didn’t want suffering and stuckness and hating herself to be her only story, and
  • why she came to me to find ways to cope, become stronger and find out who she really is.

In part 2, you’ll hear:

  • what you should do if you start smoking (or whatever) again after you’ve stopped,
  • how important it is to do it for yourself and nobody else,
  • how to get beyond powerlessness and being stuck to be at home in yourself,
  • how “negative integration” can stand in the way of being your whole powerful self,
  • about motherhood, grace, ease and perfectionism, and
  • what happens once you take away the smokescreen.


In part 3, you’ll hear:

  • how facing things and speaking to yourself more kindly can flow over into better mothering,
  • how deep love can be hidden under feelings of incompetence and overwhelm,
  • how getting out of your own way improves your relationships,
  • how much difference 6 weeks can make,
  • how powerful it can be to work with a single metaphor over an extended period, and
  • about finding the “resonant core of your deep self” and persisting in following your heart.

In part 4, you’ll hear:

  • what to do if you feel stuck,
  • how to get your self back and find joy, and
  • what I do and don’t do to help you change.

If you are in a similar place to where Sarah was at the start of our work together, contact me and let’s talk about how you can follow her great example. (And yes, I can work with you remotely over Skype.) Or just pick up my free ebook, How to Stop Smoking.

Sign up below to get early notification and a discount on my forthcoming book, How Not to Change Your Life.


Aug 3

The Thing about control…

I have a Thing about control.

Saturday: 12.20.2008
Creative Commons License photo credit: Jesse757

Not about controlling other people. (In fact, I kind of have a Thing about not controlling other people, because I hate other people trying to control me.) And not even so much about being in control of what’s happening around me, because I figured out early on that that wasn’t realistic.

My Thing is about being in control of myself.

This is why I’ve never got really drunk, for example, and in fact why I hardly ever drink at all.

I realise I’m unusual in this – at least, in how much I’m like this. But what it does is it gives me a lot of empathy for people who feel out of control, and a powerful motivation to learn techniques for getting back in control.

Which is why I do what I do. I work with people, typically stressed, busy people, who feel that their thoughts, emotions and behaviours aren’t completely under their control and who are increasingly unhappy about that. And I help them to regain that sense of control, so that they can decide on the direction of their lives and turn their attention to living their best life without being held back.

In my case, the out-of-controlness in my life has mainly been my emotions. (For other people it’s more thoughts or behaviour, but it’s all linked together somewhere down in there.) In particular, I went through an experience of several years in which I felt very out of control of my emotions.

I did my master’s degree in one year, which the university I attended let you do in that particular field, and I was involved in a lot of other things that year as well. In retrospect, I was doing too much – and it wore me down and made me emotionally vulnerable.

I fell in love, and it wasn’t reciprocated, but I had so much fear around saying anything that I didn’t find that out for a long time, and then I kept hoping, and had so much fear around saying anything that I didn’t find out again for a long time that the answer was still no, and in the meantime I’d started training for something that I wasn’t suited for or any good at, and living with too many other people, and members of my close family, in another country, were ill, and I was extremely short of money and then I got ill (from the stress), and there were times I wanted to hurl plates at my housemates I was so angry, and there were times I wanted to kill myself I was so depressed, and I started to have panic attacks whenever I was in a crowd, and the upshot was that I couldn’t work full-time for several years and carried the hurt and bitterness for many more years.

So I learned a lot about stress.

And I learned a lot, over the years that followed, about personal development and about how people work, because I wanted to understand myself and I wanted to make sure that I didn’t go down that path again.

And finally I discovered hypnotherapy. And once I figured out that it wasn’t about someone else controlling you, but about you having more control over yourself, I realised that this was what I’d been looking for.

Around the same time I started learning to meditate, which is another path to self-control. In the form I practice it, it’s about letting go of superficial thoughts (which include emotions) and allowing your true self to arise.

One day it was my turn to lead our little meditation group, and nobody else happened to turn up. So I was sitting by myself in an empty building, and fear came to visit, because I also have a Thing about being alone which is deeper and more buried than the control thing.

So I let fear go, and fear came, and I let fear go, and after about 20 minutes the timer went off and that was OK. Nothing terrible had happened because fear had come.

And the following weekend I went to a hypnotherapy conference and was more confident and gregarious than I’d ever been in my life.

U3 submarine guages
Creative Commons License photo credit: Jeremy Burgin

So my point, and I do have one, is this: If you’re feeling out of control I can completely relate to that. I mean, if I tell you I can control my skin temperature and stop my shaving cuts from bleeding and alter my heartbeat (all of which is true), it sounds like I have some kind of superpower and that I’m totally on top of things. But the reason I can do that stuff (which is a lot easier than it sounds, and also a lot less useful) is that I wanted to learn how to be in control of more important things, like fear and anger and sadness. And stress.

But enough about me. What’s your stress story? I realise you might not want to tell it publicly, so I’ve put a form below that posts, anonymously, to a place that only I will see. I look at all the responses, and I keep them in mind in everything I do, because I want to help other people feel in control of their stress too.

Jul 13

In which I eat my own dog food

“Eating your own dog food” is the rather disgusting expression the technology industry uses to mean using your own product.

Lately, I’ve been working on what was originally a course on emotions. (It’s now split into a free course on Simple Stress Management Techniques and another, yet-to-be-announced product). Ever since I’ve been working on it, I’ve been dealing with emotional issues in my own life. I thought I’d tell you a little about how that’s been going.

The Case of the Manic Mini

Maximum Mini
Creative Commons License photo credit: christian.senger
I was driving along the road, a little distracted, when a car coming in the other direction cheekily turned across in front of me to go into a side road. Now, I have a bad habit when people do that. I don’t slow down much, so that I can make the point “You really didn’t have room to do that maneuver, hold back a bit in future”. I don’t actually ram into them, of course, or do anything unsafe, but I don’t slow all the way down either.

Next thing I know, out of the same side road, turning across in front of me to go in the other direction, comes a Mini – which definitely shouldn’t have tried that move. I stamped on the brake and swerved and barely missed it.

It shook me up. I’ve been in a few car crashes over the years (most of them not my fault, by the way), and a near miss like that scares me. At one time it would have taken me a good hour or so to calm myself down.

I used a technique that’s in my Simple Stress Management Techniques course – the Welcoming Practice – and by the time I reached my destination a couple of minutes later I was fine.

The Case of the Depressing Day Job

I don’t yet do hypnotherapy full time, though I’m working hard on changing that. I have a day job to help pay the bills. It’s not been going well just lately, and I found for a while that when I was driving to work I’d start feeling down.

When the depressed feeling started, I’d immediately apply a technique of my own invention, which I call the Gut Bump. (It’s in the Simple Stress Management Techniques course.) It’s an immediate mood-lifting technique which involves turning the sinking feeling in your stomach upside-down with a bit of imagination.

It dealt with the sad feelings quite effectively. And I didn’t have to eat, drink or otherwise consume any substances to feel better.

I’ve been using a few other techniques to deal with the stress of the day job, too – the Welcoming Practice and anchoring, for example. They’re in the course too.

The Case of the Youthful Screw-Up

I’ve alluded a few times to a bad experience I had in my early 20s – 20 years ago as I write, in fact. It was largely down to me being clueless, though the fact that the other people around me were also clueless prolonged it and helped it to get worse than it otherwise would have. I won’t go into the grim details, but suffice to say that I became very stressed and very depressed and suffered significant emotional losses. Some things that were very important to me turned out to be impossible, and I took that very hard.

I’ve been aware at various times over the years that some of that hurt had remained with me, and though I’d told myself repeatedly that it was time to get past it, I never completely did.

Until this year. A couple of months back I accidentally came across a way that I could get back in touch with someone peripherally involved in the original mess. At the time, I didn’t feel I could do that, which reminded me that there was still a part of me holding on to the old pain.

One night, I was thinking about the situation and decided to use a trauma-releasing technique which the famous stage hypnotist Andrew Newton recently invented. I learned it from him earlier this year, so it was fresh in my mind. (It’ll be in the advanced version of the course.)

It took two repetitions, maybe 10 minutes or a little more. And after 20 years, the trauma was finally dealt with.

I contacted my old friend.

This Stuff Works

I could say more about how I’ve been dealing with stress, calming myself down, and generally navigating choppy emotional waters lately, but I think three stories are enough to make the point. This stuff works. I don’t just teach it, I use it myself on a near-daily basis.

Now it’s your turn.

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