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Be Unstoppable!

Fleur Dash • 18 November 2021

What would your life be like if you woke up everyday feeling unstoppable?

Would you take bigger risks and reap bigger rewards?

Would you finally give up those destructive behaviors that lead to regret and shame?

Would you be more outgoing and FINALLY have the confidence to talk to anyone?

Would you stand up and take action rather than letting another opportunity float on by?

Would you finally stick to your fitness routine and see your best self in the mirror?

Wherever you are in life, I know you’re eager to live life on your own terms.


Unfortunately, there is often something holding you back from living your dream life.

YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS MIND IS FEELING UNDER THREAT!

During our lives we develop negative thoughts, beliefs and ideas that influence our behaviour.

We create these as a safety mechanism.

We change our behaviours as a child to ensure we are not told off in school or by our parents.

We learn to stay snuggly in our comfort zones, become afraid of the unknown, and learn to play safe.

When life requires us to be challenged, try something new, step into the unknown, the subconscious will try everything to pull you back into the safe zone. 

It knows you.

It will try ANYTHING to keep you from being “in danger”.

Negative restrictive thoughts, anxious belly, accelerated heart beat, exhaustion, lack of confidence. These are all sent by the subconscious, trying to keep you from doing anything different, trying anything new….Anything to keep you “safe”

Even if that means insomnia, smoking in poisonous fumes, overeating, being miserable and not being your best self....Anything to keep you “safe”

So what is the answer?

The Solution focused hypnotherapy combines psychotherapy and clinical hypnotherapy and encourages the mind to be forward thinking. 

When we visualise how we want our lives to be, we can concentrate on all the baby steps we need to take to become the person we truly dream of being, creating change with ease.

I have helped lots of people just like you to feel like their best selves.

Try a free consultation today.

www.lovemymind.co.uk

🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈


by Fleur Dash 16 December 2024
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by Fleur Dash 26 August 2024
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by Fleur Dash 18 June 2024
Smiling is not something we learn to do, it comes completely naturally as it is a behaviour passed down through our evolution. It is thought to have originated over 30 million years ago and was used by apes and monkeys as a way of showing potential predators they were harmless. The smile we know today is the universal sign of happiness. It is one of the first expressions made by babies innately. . The baby is usually rewarded for this smile with mirroring smiles, love and attention. The behaviour becomes reinforced with feelings of pleasure and safety. This is true of all babies regardless of culture and environment, as Paul Ekman (the world’s leading expert on facial expressions) discovered; smiling is a basic and biological uniform human expression. Charles Darwin, who in addition to theorising on evolution in The Origin of the Species , also developed the Facial Feedback Response Theory, which suggests that the act of smiling actually makes us feel better (rather than smiling being a result of feeling good). When our brains feel happy we produce neurotransmitters that make us feel good. Dopamine, serotonin and endorphins are released transmitting neural signals to your facial muscles to trigger a smile. The release of serotonin with a smile is nature's own anti-depressant. It helps give our mood a lift in the same way the prescribed medication works by increasing the level of serotonin in the brain. Smiling stimulates our brain's reward mechanisms in a way that even chocolate can’t match. British researchers found that one smile can provide the same level of brain stimulation as up to 2,000 chocolate bars and can be as stimulating as receiving up to £16,000. The smile can be thought of as an “anchor”, it is a feeling that has been anchored to a particular group of muscles that is triggered when we use them. I’m sure you have put a smile on your face to help you to enter a room or when meeting someone new. This is because you get the same benefits when you actually force yourself to smile as you do when you smile naturally, this feeling encourages us when we need a boost. We create anchors unconsciously all the time when we assign meaning to a particular sensation, such as when a song always reminds you of a certain memory or person. Anchors are a very useful tool I use with my clients as we can learn to connect other feelings to other triggers on the body. By thinking about a calm time using all of our senses, we create a strong emotional link to that feeling of calm . Doing this while squeezing our fingers or holding our wrists literally makes a physical connection to that emotion. Repeating this over and over makes a new neural path in the brain, thus making a new anchor. The brain can only focus on a handful of items of information at any time (around 7), so while it is concentrating and recalling calm , it is unable to connect with any other input such as stress or worry. This is a brilliant way to train the brain into being in your control, thinking of happy thoughts and letting go of everything else.
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