Can Hypnotherapy help you perform better in Sport?

Can hypnotherapy help you perform better in sport

It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has normal.

Can Hypnotherapy help you perform better in sport or competition?

If you’ve ever trained hard but still felt like your mind was holding you back, you’re not alone. Many athletes, from weekend runners to elite professionals, find that the biggest barrier to success isn’t their physical ability — it’s what’s going on in their head.

That’s where hypnotherapy for sports performance comes in. It’s not about swinging a watch or putting you to sleep — it’s about training your mind to work with your body, rather than against it.


🧠 What Is Hypnotherapy?

Hypnotherapy combines focused relaxation (the “hypno” part) with positive, solution-focused conversation (the “therapy” part). In this state of deep focus and calm, your subconscious mind becomes more open to positive suggestions and mental rehearsal — helping you to reprogram unhelpful patterns, beliefs, or fears that might be limiting your performance.

It’s a bit like mental training for your brain — helping you strengthen the same focus, confidence, and calm that you build in your muscles through physical training.


⚡ How Hypnotherapy Enhances Sports Performance

Here are just some of the ways hypnotherapy can help athletes and performers get an edge:

1. Boosting Confidence

Many athletes struggle with self-doubt or “imposter syndrome,” especially before big events. Hypnotherapy can help you reframe your inner dialogue, reinforce belief in your abilities, and build unshakable confidence.

2. Overcoming Performance Anxiety

Nerves before a competition are normal — but when anxiety starts to affect your performance, it can hold you back. Through hypnosis, you can learn to quiet your mind, reduce physical symptoms of stress, and stay calm under pressure.

3. Sharpening Focus

Distractions, negative self-talk, or overthinking can break your concentration. Hypnotherapy helps you stay fully present in the moment, focusing only on what’s important — whether that’s your next shot, your breathing, or your rhythm.

4. Improving Motivation and Consistency

If you struggle to stay disciplined or motivated, hypnotherapy can help you reconnect with your goals and the reasons behind them. You’ll find it easier to stay consistent, even when training feels tough.

5. Accelerating Recovery

Your mental state can influence your body’s ability to recover. Hypnotherapy can support relaxation, reduce tension, and even aid faster healing by helping your body switch into a restorative state.


🎯 Mindset Is the Missing Piece

Top athletes often say the same thing: “The game is 90% mental.”
You can have the best coaching, nutrition, and training plan — but if your mindset isn’t right, you’ll never perform at your full potential.

Hypnotherapy gives you the tools to build mental resilience, emotional balance, and the calm confidence needed to perform at your best — consistently.


🏆 Real Results, Real People

Many well-known athletes and Olympians have used hypnosis and mental rehearsal techniques to enhance performance. Whether it’s staying composed under pressure, visualising success, or bouncing back from setbacks — it’s all about programming the mind for success.

And the best part? You don’t need to be a professional to benefit.
Whether you’re training for a marathon, playing in a local league, or just wanting to improve your mindset, hypnotherapy can help you get into the zone — that powerful flow state where everything just clicks.


💬 Final Thoughts

Your mind is your most powerful training tool.
When you align your mindset with your physical training, you can unlock your full potential — and perform with confidence, focus, and control.

If you’re ready to take your performance to the next level, hypnotherapy can help you get there — not by changing whoyou are, but by helping you access the very best version of yourself.


Interested in learning more?
Book a free consultation or reach out to discover how solution-focused hypnotherapy can help you train your mind for peak performance — in sport, competition, and beyond.

Email: laura@laurabeadle.com 

Your Brain Doesn’t Care About Your Happiness

Understanding Your Brain

Your Brain Doesn’t Care About Your Happiness, And That’s Okay

Your Brain doesn’t care about your happiness (and that’s okay)

We need to understand something really important about our brain.

Our brain doesn’t care whether we’re happy or sad. It doesn’t care about making us joyful. It doesn’t care about our goals, our wants, our hopes, or our desires.

It cares about one thing — and one thing only:
keeping you safe and alive.

Once we understand this fact about the brain, we can start working with it rather than against it. And that’s where real change begins.


The Two Parts of the Brain

There are two key parts of the brain that influence how we think, feel, and behave:

1. The Intellectual Brain

This is the prefrontal cortex — the conscious, logical part of your brain.
It’s the part you know as “you.” It’s what you’re using right now as you read this.

When you’re in your intellectual brain, you feel calm, confident, and in control. You can assess situations rationally and come up with clear, logical solutions.
This is where you feel brave, motivated, happy, and focused.

2. The Primitive Brain

Then there’s the primitive brain — the older, subconscious part that dates back to caveman times.

The key player here is the amygdala, which controls the fight–flight–freeze response. It works closely with two other parts:

  • The hypothalamus, which regulates all your chemical and physical reactions.

  • The hippocampus, which stores emotional memories and learned behaviours.

This part of the brain is constantly scanning for danger. It’s not interested in happiness or dreams — it just wants to keep you alive.


Why We React the Way We Do

Let’s imagine something for a moment.

You go for a walk, and suddenly you see a tiger walking down the street. What happens?

Your heart starts racing, your stomach churns, you get hot and sweaty — and you run!
That’s the correct response because your brain thinks your life is in danger.

Now, here’s the problem: your brain reacts in exactly the same way when you get an unexpected bill, argue with someone, or feel overwhelmed at work.

It can’t tell the difference between a real-life threat and a perceived one.

Your brain doesn’t know the difference between imagination and reality.

You could close your eyes right now and imagine sitting in the woods, when suddenly a bear appears and steals your lunch — and your body would start reacting as though it’s actually happening.

That’s how powerful your imagination is.

It’s also why we experience stress and anxiety. When we negatively forecast the future — imagining everything that could go wrong — our brain and body respond as if those events are happening right now.

Think about a job interview or an important presentation. You might imagine it going badly fifty times in your head before it even happens. Then the actual event goes fine — but your brain and body have lived through it 51 times. No wonder you’re exhausted!


Moving Into the Intellectual Brain

So, if our brain’s default mode is to keep us on high alert, how can we move into that calmer, rational, intellectual state?

That’s the key to becoming happier, more focused, and more resilient.

When I work with clients, we spend time helping the brain shift from its primitive, anxious state into the intellectual brain using positive talking therapy and practical tools that promote calm, clarity, and control.

Here’s one simple tool you can try straight away:

👉 Ask yourself, “What’s been good today?”

It sounds simple, but it’s powerful.

You don’t need big, life-changing answers — just small things that went well.
Maybe it was your first cup of tea in the morning, a patch of sunshine, or a friendly conversation.

When you focus on what’s been good, your brain releases serotonin — the neurotransmitter that helps you feel calm, balanced, and happy. This naturally moves you into your intellectual brain.


The Three Ps

I often talk about the Three Ps, simple yet powerful habits that help you stay in the intellectual part of your brain:

  1. Positive Thought – Focus on what’s been good.

  2. Positive Action – Move your body. Exercise, even a short walk, boosts serotonin, dopamine, and endorphins — your natural mood-lifters.

  3. Positive Interaction – Spend time with people who lift you up. Genuine, face-to-face connection (not through a screen!) helps calm the brain and build resilience.

These small daily actions help your brain feel safe — and when your brain feels safe, you feel happier, calmer, and more in control.


Working With Your Brain, Not Against It

So, to come full circle:
Your brain doesn’t care about your happiness — it cares about your safety.

But once you understand that, you can start working with your brain instead of against it.

By spending more time in your intellectual brain — through positive thoughts, actions, and interactions — you can calm your stress response, boost your mood, and take control of your life again.

When you do that, you stop seeing tigers everywhere — and start living your life the way you truly want to live it.

Ready to Start Collaborating With Your Brain?

If you’d like to learn how to quieten your mind, reduce stress, and spend more time in your intellectual brain, I can help.

I offer solution-focused hypnotherapy sessions designed to help you retrain your brain, manage anxiety, and feel more in control of your thoughts and emotions. 

I’m a solution focused hypnotherapist based in South Buckinghamshire, near High Wycombe, Beaconsfield & Amersham. I offer sessions online, so I can work with you wherever you are in the world.

✨ You can book a free consultation or find out more about how I can help you rewire your brain and get your sparkle back.

Email: laura@laurabeadle.com

What is Hypnotherapy

What is Hypnotherapy

What Is Hypnotherapy?

This is such a common question — and a really good one! So, let’s break it down.

There are two main parts to hypnotherapy:
the “hypno” part — that’s the hypnosis, and
the “therapy” part — that’s the talking therapy.

In solution-focused hypnotherapy, we combine both.
The therapy side uses positive, forward-focused talking techniques to help you move your brain into the intellectual part — the part that helps you stay calm, think clearly, and find solutions. Together, we set small, achievable goals that move you towards the life you want, rather than focusing on what’s wrong.

Then there’s the hypnosis part. This is where you close your eyes and enter a calm, relaxed, trance-like state. It’s not sleep — it’s more like that peaceful daydreamy feeling you get when you’re deeply relaxed. In this state, your mind becomes more open to positive suggestions — the kind that help you build confidence, reduce stress, and start rewiring your brain for the life you want.

Now, a lot of people worry about hypnosis. They think it’s brain control — maybe because they’ve seen stage hypnosis, where people are made to do silly things like cluck like a chicken on holiday! But stage hypnosis is completely different — it’s entertainment, not therapy.
If you imagine comparing football to rugby — yes, both involve a ball, but they’re totally different games. It’s the same here. Therapeutic hypnosis is calm, safe, and designed to give you back control of your mind, not take it away.

In fact, I like to think of hypnotherapy as helping you learn to drive your own brain. Most of us go through life without an instruction manual for how our minds work. But your brain is like a high-performance sports car — powerful, capable, and amazing. You just need to know how to drive it. That’s what we do together: I help you understand how your brain works, and how to get it working for you, instead of against you.

In each session, we start by talking about the brain — the neuroscience behind why we feel the way we do, especially when it comes to stress and anxiety. When our stress “bucket” overflows, that’s when we experience physical, emotional, or mental symptoms. Understanding that connection helps you take back control.

The talking therapy part is solution-focused — we don’t go digging into the past. Instead, we look at the future:

  • Who do you want to be?

  • What would life look like if this problem wasn’t in the way?

  • What small steps can we take to get you there?

Some other types of hypnotherapy use regression — taking you back into the past to find the “root cause” of a problem. But I don’t use that approach, because it’s not always pleasant, and science shows our memories aren’t always accurate. Instead, I focus on what works: helping you build new neural pathways in the brain that support calmness, confidence, and resilience.

So, in a typical session, we begin by talking — understanding your goals, explaining how the brain works, and setting small, realistic steps forward. Then, we move into hypnosis — a relaxing, positive experience designed to calm your mind and reinforce everything we’ve discussed.

Hypnotherapy can help with a wide range of issues — physical, emotional, and mental.

Here are just some of the things I can help you with: 

I help people overcome and manage their stress, anxiety & overwhelm

I help athletes, performers, and creatives unlock their full potential — people who want to overcome anxiety, boost confidence & self belief, develop resilience and perform at their best, whether that’s on stage, in competition, or in daily life.

I help people manage their weight and health

I help women manage the symptoms of menopause

I help people overcome fears & phobias

I help people with exam nerves, delivering a presentation / sales pitch, public speaking 

And lots more. If you’d like to find out how I can help you, do drop me an email laura@laurabeadle.com