Fears and Phobias Treatment Ireland
Stop Panic at the Root, Retrain Your Brain, and Restore Control with Hypnotherapy, Psychotherapy, RTT® and Clinical Nutrition
Serving Dublin, Cork, Limerick and ONLINE across Ireland, the UK, UAE and worldwide
You may look calm on the outside, yet inside your body reacts fast. Your heart pounds, your breathing tightens, your thoughts race. It might happen before a flight, while driving, in social settings, during medical procedures, or sometimes without warning. You try to push through, but something in your system takes over.
This is not a lack of willpower. It is a learned pattern in the brain and nervous system. And it can be changed.
Summary
Fears and phobias are powerful but treatable conditions where the brain misinterprets safety as danger. Using a structured, evidence-informed approach, with 20+ years clinical experience, that combines Clinical Medical Hypnotherapy, Rapid Transformational Therapy (RTT®), Counselling, Psychotherapy, and Registered Nutritionist support with Functional Medicine, it is possible to reduce panic responses, recondition triggers, and restore a stable sense of control.
This is not about coping alone. It is about changing the pattern at its source.
What You May Be Experiencing
You might recognise some of these symptoms:
Physical Symptoms
- Racing or pounding heart
- Tight chest or difficulty breathing
- Dizziness or light-headedness
- Sweating, shaking, or trembling
- Nausea or digestive upset
- Tingling or numbness
- Sudden fatigue or weakness
Emotional and Cognitive Symptoms
- Intense fear or dread
- Feeling out of control
- Fear of fainting or dying
- Overthinking or catastrophic thoughts
- Difficulty concentrating
- Heightened sensitivity to surroundings
Behavioural Patterns
- Avoiding certain places or situations
- Leaving situations early
- Relying on safety behaviours
- Delaying or cancelling plans
- Restricting travel, work, or social life
These patterns often overlap with:
- Panic disorder and generalised anxiety
- ADHD and emotional overwhelm
- Sleep difficulties and insomnia
- Gut and digestive issues such as IBS, reflux, bloating
- Hormonal fluctuations including PMS, PMDD, perimenopause
- Autoimmune conditions such as Hashimoto’s, coeliac disease, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis
- Addictive patterns including alcohol, nicotine, sugar, or behavioural habits
What Is a Phobia?
A phobia is a persistent, excessive fear response triggered by a specific situation, object, or experience.
Common examples include:
- Fear of flying
- Driving anxiety or driving test nerves
- Social anxiety and fear of judgment
- Fear of medical or dental procedures
- Fear of heights, water, enclosed or open spaces
- Animal fears such as dogs, spiders, birds
- Examination anxiety
- Sexual performance anxiety
- Fear of losing control
While the trigger may differ, the underlying mechanism is similar.
The Neuroscience of Fear
To understand how change happens, it helps to understand what is happening inside your body.
The Threat System
The amygdala scans for danger. When it detects a threat, it activates:
- The hypothalamus, which signals the stress response
- The autonomic nervous system, triggering fight, flight, or freeze
- The release of stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol
This response happens quickly, often before conscious thought.
Why Logic Does Not Work in the Moment
The prefrontal cortex, responsible for reasoning, becomes less active during panic. This is why telling yourself to calm down rarely works when you are triggered.
Why Fears and Phobias Persist
1. Learned Conditioning
A past experience becomes linked with danger. This may be remembered or outside conscious awareness.
2. Reinforced Avoidance
Avoiding the trigger reduces anxiety temporarily, strengthening the fear pattern.
3. Nervous System Overload
Chronic stress, trauma, or burnout increases sensitivity to perceived threats.
4. Gut–Brain Axis
The gut communicates with the brain through neural and immune pathways. Imbalance can increase anxiety responses.
5. Hormonal Influences
Thyroid changes, perimenopause, PMS, and cortisol dysregulation can intensify symptoms.
6. Neurodivergence
ADHD and sensory sensitivity can amplify emotional and physiological responses.
A Clinical Approach That Works at Depth
With over 20 years of clinical experience across Ireland, the UK, and Europe, my work is grounded in integrating multiple disciplines to address fear at every level.
Clinical Medical Hypnotherapy
Accesses subconscious patterns where automatic fear responses are stored.
Rapid Transformational Therapy (RTT®)
Identifies and restructures core beliefs driving fear and anxiety.
Counselling and Psychotherapy
Supports emotional processing, behavioural change, and long-term resilience.
Registered Nutritionist Support
Addresses gut health, inflammation, blood sugar, and nutrient status, all of which influence anxiety and panic.
Neuroscience-Informed Techniques
Help regulate the nervous system and improve emotional stability.
How Hypnotherapy Helps You Change the Pattern
1. Break the Trigger Response Loop
The brain learns that the trigger is safe.
2. Desensitise the Nervous System
Exposure is introduced in a controlled and safe way.
3. Reprocess Earlier Associations
Where appropriate, earlier experiences are reframed.
4. Install New Responses
Calm, controlled reactions replace automatic fear.
5. Strengthen Internal Control
You learn how to regulate your state in real time.
Why Addressing the Body Matters
Fear is not only psychological.
As a Registered Nutritionist, I consider:
- Blood sugar instability and its effect on anxiety
- Gut microbiome balance
- Inflammation and immune activation
- Nutrient deficiencies affecting mood and cognition
This is especially relevant if you experience:
- Anxiety with digestive symptoms
- Hormonal mood fluctuations
- Chronic fatigue or burnout
- Cravings or addictive behaviours
What You Can Try This Fortnight
- Define your trigger clearly
Precision helps your brain process the pattern. - Lengthen your exhale
Inhale for 4 seconds, exhale for 6 seconds to activate calm. - Reduce avoidance gradually
Small steps build confidence and resilience. - Eat regularly
Include protein and fats to stabilise blood sugar. - Track patterns
Notice how sleep, stress, and food influence your symptoms.
Safety note: If symptoms are severe or you are taking medication, consult your GP before making changes.
Treatment Expectations
- Simple phobias often improve within 2 to 3 sessions
- More complex or long-standing anxiety may require 8 to 12 sessions
Sessions are available online or in person across Ireland.
Real Change Is Possible
Fear can feel absolute. It can limit your world in quiet but significant ways.
Yet it is not permanent.
It is a pattern your brain has learned in an attempt to protect you. With the right clinical approach, that pattern can be updated.
You can feel steady again. You can move forward with confidence. You can regain control over your responses.
FAQs
1. How effective is hypnotherapy for phobias?
It is well supported as an adjunct to behavioural therapies and can accelerate change.
2. Will I be aware during hypnosis?
Yes. You remain aware and in control throughout.
3. Can panic attacks stop completely?
For many people, they reduce significantly or stop.
4. Are online sessions effective?
Yes. Many people achieve strong results online.
5. Can children and teenagers be treated?
Yes. Approaches are adapted for age and development.
6. Do you address physical contributors like gut health?
Yes. Nutrition and physiology are integrated where relevant.
7. What if I have multiple overlapping issues?
A tailored plan addresses anxiety, sleep, gut health, hormones, and behavioural patterns together.
Book a Consultation Now
ONLINE and In-Person Appointments Available
Adare | Newcastle West | Limerick | Abbeyfeale | Charleville | Kanturk | Midleton | Youghal | Cork | Dungarvan | Dublin
✔ Clinical Medical Hypnotherapy and Clinical Hypnotherapy
✔ Rapid Transformational Therapy (RTT®)
✔ Counselling and Psychotherapy
✔ Registered Nutritionist Support
Take the first step towards calm, clarity, and control.
Author
Claire Russell
Registered Nutritionist, Clinical Medical Hypnotherapist, Psychotherapist, Counsellor, RTT and Advanced RTT Practitioner
20+ years clinical experience across Ireland, the UK and Europe
Educational Note
This article is for educational purposes only and does not replace medical advice. Please consult your GP or healthcare provider where appropriate.
Academic References
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- Hofmann SG et al. Cognitive behavioral therapy meta-analysis https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2012.04.002
- Craske MG et al. Exposure therapy optimisation https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2008.08.004
- Öst LG. One-session phobia treatment https://doi.org/10.1016/S0005-7967(89)80013-1
- Kirsch I. Hypnosis and CBT https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-2909.117.1.56
- Lynn SJ et al. Hypnosis research https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2015.03.004
- Hammond DC. Hypnosis anxiety treatment https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-006X.78.3.389
- Spiegel D. Stress and hypnosis https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2014.09.001
- Barlow DH. Anxiety disorders https://doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780195123791.001.0001
- Clark DM. Panic model https://doi.org/10.1016/S0005-7967(86)80010-2
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- Cuijpers P et al. Anxiety treatments https://doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(16)30354-1
- Cryan JF et al. Gut-brain axis https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn3346
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CONTROLLING FEAR
Panic disorders including fears and phobias respond excellently to hypno-psychotherapy because all are learned behaviors, and come under the heading of cause and effect and once the cause is unearthed during hypno-regression, the emotional effects dissipate. The client learns to gain a sense of internal control over the fearful or anxiety-producing triggers
The most common fears and phobias treated:
Anxiety – Bed wetting – Blushing – Examinations –Food issues – Flying – Driving/Driving tests – Spiders – Birds – Heights – Dentists – Open spaces – Social phobia – Dogs – Failure – Medical procedures (needles, anesthesia etc) – Water – Sexual performance anxiety – Losing control
You don’t need to live with panic
