Hypnotherapy, Shoeburyness – I specialise in empowering women to throw off the shackles of the stress, anxiety and control that food has over their lives and enabling them to obtain the freedom that they deserve and desire.
I am not just any old Hypnotherapist though, in my tool bag I have more bad ass techniques than you can shake a stick at in order to get you to where you want to be. What’s more when I say ‘where YOU want to be’ I really mean it. We are all amazing, fascinating and complex individuals and I want to honour that in you.
So what do I do then? Well……
– I use the Hypnotherapy and Neuro Linguistic programming to uncover, change and move you on from those unhelpful, outdated programmes that are keeping you and your brain stuck in the same old, same old.
– I use the Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy to shed light on how your thought, emotions, behaviours and physical self are all influencing each other, for better or for worse. Once you can see it all so clearly, you’ll have the power to change it for the better.
– I use my Nutritional Therapist qualification to help you tweak your eating so that you’re not only looking better, but you’re feeling better too.
– And last but not least the Health coaching is there to set your goals and cheer you on and give you a kick up the bum until you get there. Support and accountability in equal measure my friend! Hypnosis Treatment in Shoeburyness
Get in touch today…
Interesting facts about Shoeburyness
The English painter J. M. W. Turner depicted the fishermen of Shoeburyness in his oil painting Shoeburyness Fishermen Hailing a Whitstable Hoy. The painting was exhibited in 1809 and was part of a series Turner made of the Thames estuary between 1808 and 1810. The painting has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada since 1939. In the fifth Temeraire novel Victory of Eagles, Shoeburyness is the setting of a fictitious climactic battle in which Wellesley and Nelson drive Napoleon out of England in early 1808. Shoeburyness is home to “the commuter”, the protagonist in the eponymous song and music video by Ceephax Acid Crew.
Access to the large gravel/grass pay-and-display car park is via Rampart Terrace. East Beach is the site of a defence boom, built-in 1944, to prevent enemy shipping and submarines from accessing the River Thames. This replaced an earlier, similar boom built 100 yards east. The majority of the boom was dismantled after the war, but around one mile still remains, stretching out into the Thames Estuary.
East Beach benefits from a large grassy area immediately adjacent to the sands, which is suitable for informal sports and family fun. Shoeburyness is where, during the Second World War, a magnetic ground mine, which was deposited in the mud at the mouth of the Thames by the Luftwaffe, was discovered by the MoD.