10/01/2025
Can Hypnosis Help With Addiction?
This is a great question and one that I receive fairly often. The truth is that there is not a simple answer, and the best I can say is “It depends.” If a smoker wants to stop smoking, hypnosis is incredibly effective with about 98% achieving their goals after a single session- assuming that they WANT to quit rather than feeling forced or imposed by family, friends, or medical professionals. If a person is dealing with a “sugar addiction” or wants to change their relationship with food and with their appetite, hypnosis can be equally effective but will probably take multiple sessions to achieve the best of results. We can stop smoking but we cannot stop eating, so there are more nuances to work through.
What people are usually asking is, “Can hypnosis heal addiction to drugs and alcohol?” The best answer is “Sort of, but not in the way that you hope.” We can not hypnotize away alcoholism or drug addiction. The brain and body are simply not wired that way. Addiction is complex and there is a lot more going on with a person’s experience when it comes to drugs and alcohol. Addiction affects your thoughts, beliefs, emotions, physical sensations in the body, traumatic memories, chemical reactions in the body, interactions between dopamine and serotonin and so much more… Your hypnotherapist and EMDR specialist can be an important member of your team but they will not be enough to meet all of the needs of a person in recovery.
Let’s talk about addiction for a moment. There are many different views of addiction. The legal community generally labels it a behavioral problem. Society usually views it as poor character or a moral failure. Even some *good* recovery programs may view it as a failure of willpower. Personally, I take a different approach. I view addiction as a person’s desperate attempt to solve a problem. Sure, it is a MALADAPTIVE solution, but I do not see addiction as the problem. Addiction is the consequence of using a poor solution to a problem. When it comes to trying to cope with overwhelming traumas, nobody wakes up one day and says, “I really want to ruin my life.” There is something else… something more frightening than addiction that makes drugs and alcohol feel attractive. There are underlying traumas, fears, horrible experiences, negative beliefs about yourself or about the world around you that lie deeper than the addiction. People turn to drugs and alcohol as a means of trying to cope with an overwhelming reality. Drugs and alcohol are a poor attempt to solve those deeper problems, and before you know it, your solution overwhelms you, and you are trapped.
Using a combination of techniques including hypnotherapy and EMDR, we can begin to untangle those underlying issues and begin to heal those traumas. I am certified in EMDR as well as in specific addiction modifications that target and desensitize triggers for using. I am NOT a licensed drug and alcohol abuse counselor, and I am NOT qualified to be the only resource. I am simply one member of a larger team. A person struggling through recovery needs a complete team including medical professionals and addiction specialists to provide the proper support in the proper ways. Healing the deeper issues is only one aspect of meeting your needs but even after some healing is achieved, there is still more work to do in maintaining sobriety and recovery.