
Have you ever tried self-hypnosis? It’s an incredible way to focus your mind on specific changes you want to make while in a relaxed state. Despite its benefits, many people shy away from it, thinking it’s too complicated or difficult to master.
In our episode of Thin Thinking, I’ll be walking you through an easy-to-follow self-hypnosis structure. Whether you’re aiming for weight goals or other life achievements, this technique can help you make meaningful progress.
Don’t miss out on this empowering session. Come on in!
In This Episode, You’ll Learn:
What really is self-hypnosis.
How you can do self-hypnosis.
Two ways you can approach self-hypnosis.
Links Mentioned in this Episode
Have you ever wanted a way to stop the spiral before it starts? Before the vending machine. Before the “I’ll start tomorrow.” Before you’re standing in the kitchen thinking, Why am I doing this again?
Here’s the truth most people don’t hear enough: your weight struggle usually doesn’t start with food — it starts with your mind. In this episode of Thin Thinking, I walk you through a self-hypnosis structure that’s simple, practical, and surprisingly empowering. Because once you can guide your mind in a relaxed, focused state, you can guide your choices in real life.
And if self-hypnosis feels “too complicated,” you’re not alone. That’s one of the biggest reasons people avoid it. But you’re about to see a structure you can use for weight goals, habit change, and honestly… life goals too.
You’ll learn:
- What self-hypnosis is (in plain English)
- The easiest way to do it in the morning
- How to use it to break snacking loops and cravings
- How to record your own sessions (even if you hate hearing your voice)
Let’s make it doable.
What is self-hypnosis (and why does it work for weight loss)?
Self-hypnosis is giving your mind suggestions during a state of relaxed, focused awareness — so your brain has a new “route” to take when old habits try to run the day.
A lot of people assume hypnosis is like being unconscious. It’s not. In this episode, I define hypnosis as “a procedure, which suggestions are given during a state of focused awareness.” That matters because your goal isn’t to zone out — it’s to focus your mind on the changes you actually want.
Why does that help with weight loss?
Because so many weight patterns are automated. You’re not making a fresh decision at 3:00 PM — you’re running a script. And once the script starts, it can feel like the train has left the station.
That’s why self-hypnosis is so useful for weight mastery: it helps you interrupt the pattern before you’re in the danger zone. In other words, you’re not trying to “be strong” while you’re triggered. You’re training your brain ahead of time.
And I want to say this clearly, because it’s one of the most freeing ideas in the whole episode:
- This isn’t about being good.
- It’s about learning to use your brain in the best way.
Self-hypnosis is a mind tool. You’re not fixing something “wrong” with you. You’re upgrading your inner operating system.
When is the best time to do self-hypnosis?
The best time to do self-hypnosis is when your brain is naturally more open and less reactive — and for most people, that’s the morning or right before sleep.
I love the morning for self-hypnosis because you’re already coming out of sleep. Your brain is fresh. You’re naturally closer to that relaxed trance state.
But you can use self-hypnosis at other strategic times too:
Morning (my favorite)
- You’re already relaxed
- You can “pre-load” new choices into your day
- You can rehearse the moments you usually derail
Midday reset (5 minutes is enough)
If afternoons are your danger zone, take a short break and visualize how you want the rest of the day to go. I used the example of the vending machine pattern — because once you’re standing there, it’s much harder to change.
Nighttime (great for morning follow-through)
Night is powerful for programming what you want to do tomorrow morning — especially exercise. Visualize:
- getting up
- putting your clothes on
- finishing the workout
- how good it feels afterward
Then your subconscious mind can “work on it” while you sleep.
And here’s a bigger point that matters for weight mastery:
Life management is weight management. Stress in your relationships, money pressure, exhaustion, overwhelm — it all impacts eating. So yes, you can use self-hypnosis for weight goals… and also for the life stuff that drives the weight stuff.
How do you do a simple morning self-hypnosis routine?
A simple morning self-hypnosis routine has four parts: purpose, relaxation, visualization, and a “walk-through” of your day.
This is the structure I taught in the episode (and it’s easier than most people expect):
1) Start with a purpose
Don’t drift into it. Decide what you’re doing it for:
- “Today I break afternoon snacking.”
- “Today I eat within my plan.”
- “Today I handle stress without food.”
- “Today I follow through on my walk.”
This matters because your brain loves a clear target.
2) Relax your body (choose one)
You’ve got options. Pick the one you’ll actually do.
Option A: Tense and release (super easy)
- Tighten all muscles
- Hold
- Release
Repeat 3 times.
Option B: Progressive relaxation
Move attention through the body (feet to head or head to feet). You’re not trying to be perfect — you’re training focus.
Option C: “Five steps down”
In the episode, I describe going down five steps and going “twice as deep” each step. Don’t get caught in the math. Just act as if it works — because the more you do it, the more your nervous system learns the pathway.
3) Enter your “Shift place”
I like imagining a door at the bottom of the stairs — a symbolic way of opening your subconscious mind to change. On the other side is a relaxing space (beach, meadow, peaceful room). Nothing overly stimulating.
4) Use the “movie screen” visualization
Now you create. I recommend starting with a bigger vision:
- You at your healthy, strong, confident weight
- Or, if that feels too far away, you 10–20 pounds down and feeling steady
Then work backward:
- End of the day: you getting into bed feeling proud and light
- Your day: meals, movement, and the tricky moments
Here’s the key: you rehearse the moments that normally run you. If 1:00 PM is your snack spiral, you visualize a new script at 1:00 PM.
5) Merge into the scene (make it 3D)
This is where it gets powerful. First, you watch yourself. Then you step into the scene and feel it in your body.
Because feelings teach the brain.
Confidence, relief, pride, steadiness — those emotions tell your nervous system: this is the direction.
6) Finish with gratitude and come back up
Gratitude “locks in” the new pathway. Then count up, breathe, open your eyes, start your day.
If you want a practical, step-by-step walkthrough for creating your own hypnosis sessions, listen to Episode 31 — DIY Self-Hypnosis Technique, which builds directly on the structure taught here and helps you turn self-hypnosis into a repeatable daily skill.
How can self-hypnosis break cravings and snacking habits?
Self-hypnosis breaks cravings by rehearsing a better choice before you’re triggered — and by teaching your brain that the old habit leads to pain, not relief.
Let’s talk about the real problem: cravings aren’t just hunger. They’re often:
- stress relief
- avoidance
- a reward loop
- a nervous system pattern
So when you try to stop a habit with willpower, it can feel like your brain is fighting for survival.
That’s why I teach this idea in the episode: the morning is an interrupter. It interrupts the automated pattern before it starts.
The “alternative route” method
If your habit is:
- vending machine at 1:00 PM
you rehearse: - staying at your desk
- taking a breath
- eating the apple you brought
- enjoying the taste
- feeling proud afterward
You’re not just saying “don’t do it.” You’re installing a replacement path.
The pain-first method (for hardwired habits)
This is for the habits that feel glued to you.
You visualize the habit first — and then you deliberately walk your brain through the cost:
- how your stomach feels after
- blood sugar crash
- that heavy, regret feeling
- going to bed feeling “off”
That may sound intense, but it’s strategic: you’re overpowering the “reward” story your brain has attached to the habit.
Then you immediately visualize the better ending:
- tea or water on the couch
- feeling light
- going to bed proud
- waking up without the regret hangover
This is how you stop letting the craving moment “decide.” You decide ahead of time.
What do you say during self-hypnosis for weight loss?
The best self-hypnosis language is simple, specific, and focused on what you ARE doing — not what you’re trying to stop.
You don’t need fancy scripts. You need clarity.
Here are strong prompts you can speak (or record) in your own voice:
Vision prompts (identity + direction)
- “This is who I’m becoming: steady, strong, consistent.”
- “I eat like someone who trusts herself.”
- “I make choices that match my goals.”
Day walkthrough prompts (behavior rehearsal)
- “At lunch, I stop when I’m satisfied.”
- “At 1:00, I pause, breathe, and choose what supports me.”
- “When I get home, I change clothes and go for my walk.”
Feeling-based prompts (this is what sticks)
- “Notice how proud I feel.”
- “Notice how light my body feels tonight.”
- “Notice how calm I am when I follow through.”
Gratitude prompts (future pacing)
- “I’m grateful I feel comfortable in my skin.”
- “I’m grateful my energy is steady.”
- “I’m grateful I’m building real trust with myself.”
One important nuance from the episode: don’t focus on “I’m not going to eat chocolate.” Your brain can latch onto the image of chocolate. Instead, name the replacement: “I drink tea while I watch TV.”
How do you record your own self-hypnosis session?
Recording your own self-hypnosis is one of the fastest ways to get specific, because you can tailor the language to your exact habit, trigger, and goal.
Yes, most people hate hearing their own voice at first. That’s normal. But this is where you practice Inner Coach energy: calm, clear, and on your side.
Here’s a simple structure to record (10–12 minutes is plenty):
1) Quick relaxation (1–2 minutes)
Use tense-and-release or progressive relaxation.
2) Your “Shift place” + movie screen (1 minute)
“Open the door.” Sit in the calm space. See the screen.
3) Big vision (1 minute)
Healthy-you. Strong-you. Consistent-you. Make it believable.
4) End-of-day win (1 minute)
You in bed feeling proud: “I took care of myself today.”
5) Reverse engineer the day (3–5 minutes)
Walk through the day in order:
- meals
- movement
- triggers
- what you do instead
- how it feels
6) Pain-first (optional, 1–2 minutes)
Only if you need it for a stubborn habit: show your brain the cost, then the better ending.
7) Gratitude + close (1 minute)
Count up, return, done.
And a practical tip straight from the episode: update your recording every quarter (or whenever it starts feeling outdated). Your brain responds to relevance.
What if self-hypnosis feels awkward or you fall asleep?
If self-hypnosis feels awkward at first, that’s not failure — it’s the learning curve of building a new mental skill.
A few normal things that happen:
“I’m not doing it right.”
You are. The point is practice, not performance. Perfection is just your Inner Critic trying to take the wheel.
“I fell asleep.”
That can happen, especially at night or if you’re exhausted. If you keep falling asleep in the morning, sit up instead of lying down.
“My mind wanders.”
Totally normal. Just come back to your purpose: the one moment today you want to do differently.
“I hate my recorded voice.”
Most people do at first. Then they get used to it. And then something wild happens: they start to feel supported by their own voice — which is the whole point.
(Brand voice alignment note: this article is written to match the Shift Hypnosis “wise mentor / practical guide” tone from your voice framework.
Shift Hypnosis Voice & Tone Gui…
)
FAQ: Self-hypnosis for weight loss
1) Can self-hypnosis really help with weight loss?
Yes — because it targets the mental patterns that drive eating and follow-through. It’s especially useful for cravings, emotional eating, and consistency.
2) How long should a self-hypnosis session be?
Even 5 minutes can help. Many people like 10–15 minutes in the morning.
3) What’s the easiest way to start self-hypnosis?
Start with tense-and-release relaxation, then visualize one “tricky moment” today and rehearse your new choice.
4) When should I do self-hypnosis: morning or night?
Morning is great for planning and interrupting patterns. Night is great for programming the next day (especially exercise).
5) What if I can’t visualize clearly?
That’s okay. Use a sense of the scene: feelings, words, or a general image. Your brain still learns from rehearsal.
6) Should I focus on my ideal weight or small goals?
If ideal weight feels inspiring, use it. If it feels too far away, use 10–20 pounds down and focus on “healthy and steady.”
7) Is it okay to use self-hypnosis for non-weight goals?
Absolutely. In the episode, I talk about using it for motherhood, relationships, business goals, and stress — because those directly affect eating.
Conclusion
Self-hypnosis isn’t magic. But it can feel magical when you realize you can guide your mind instead of getting dragged around by old patterns.
If your hardest moments happen on autopilot — afternoon snacking, evening TV eating, skipping workouts — self-hypnosis gives you a way to interrupt the loop before you’re standing in the kitchen negotiating with yourself.
Start small:
- pick one purpose
- rehearse one moment
- feel the win in your body
- repeat tomorrow
Because the real flex isn’t “being good.”
It’s becoming the person who knows how to lead herself.
If you found this episode helpful, you might also enjoy this related Thin Thinking episode: