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philosophy
People are becoming increasingly unwell due to the stresses of the modern world. Sometimes we forget that the mind is in fact very old and has a hard time coping with the strains of this new, fast paced and demanding life.
Medicine has done well healing the physical body, but has struggled to cure problems of the mind. We must not forget that the body and mind are connected and without a healthy mind, we cannot have a healthy body. A method is needed to soothe and reason with the mind so we can work toward good mental health.
The pressures and demands placed upon traditional health services has come to mean that however well meaning the practitioners less time is being spent on the human aspect of health and wellbeing. Less time inherently moves services toward increased efficiency and all too regularly efficiency savings are produced by focusing on numbers and not people. We need to make a shift back to genuine patient care if a quality, meaningful and human service is to be provided.
Hypnotherapy is not simply the attainment of trance. Great care must be given to the person, their thinking and ideas, their perspective and view of their place in the world. A good client therapist relationship should be frank and conducted in an atmosphere of confidentiality and trust so clients feel able to talk freely. This cannot be achieved in a few minutes. Sheffield City Hypnotherapy places great emphasis on the individual, not simply on the mechanics of hypnotherapy.



The non-invasive nature of hypnotherapy is one of the reasons it is becoming increasingly prominent in the healthcare canon. Real benefits can be achieved without resorting to medication or medical procedure and crucially instead of fostering a dependence upon an outside actor, places the individual at the centre of the process, encouraging them to take ownership of their health and the decisions and possibilities available to them.
One of the great paradoxes of modern society is found within the subject of community. Being more connected than ever, having access to all sorts of groups and collectives should mean than we feel a sense of community, of belonging. For an increasing amount of people this is not the case. The boom in global interconnectivity has meant the breakdown of traditional local communities leaving people feeling isolated and dis-connected. Now more than ever having services which offer a time and space for individuals to feel valued and understood is vitally important, not only for the person but for the community they exist within.
