Hypnotherapy, Southgate – 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– I use the Hypnotherapy and Neuro Linguistic programming to uncover, change and move you on from those unhelpful, outdated programmes that are keeping you and your brain stuck in the same old, same old.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 Southgate
Get in touch today…
Interesting facts about Southgate
Southgate is a suburban area of north London, England in the London Borough of Enfield. It is located around 8 miles north of Charing Cross. The name is derived from being the south gate to Enfield Chase. Within the area is the art deco Grade II* Southgate tube station designed by Charles Holden.
In Waterfall Road is Christ Church, built-in 1862 by Sir Gilbert Scott; adjacent to its grounds, in Minchenden Oak Garden, stands the Minchenden Oak. Across the road from the church lies the Walker Cricket Ground; a regular Middlesex venue which was first used in 1859 and is named after the cricketer John Walker.
Southgate was originally the South Gate of Enfield Chase, the King’s hunting grounds. This is reflected in the street names Chase Road and Chase Side. There is a blue plaque on a building on the site of the south gate. A little further to the south was another small medieval settlement called South Street which had grown up around a village green; by 1829 the two settlements had merged and the village green became today’s Southgate Green.
In 1894 an urban district of Middlesex, called Southgate, was created by the Local Government Act 1894. In 1933 the Municipal Borough of Southgate was created. The borough was abolished in 1965 by the London Government Act 1963, and incorporated within the new London Borough of Enfield, also including the areas that had been within the Municipal Borough of Enfield and the Municipal Borough of Edmonton.