Mindglad programme

Hypnosis for heartbreak

This programme is designed for waves of longing, rumination, and contact urges after a breakup. It helps you practise making it through the next wave without reopening the wound, using calm guided voiceover, a short relief session, and repeatable cues you can return to when the old pattern gets loud.

Is this programme for you?

  • Contact-urge delay
  • Memory softening
  • Evening grief pacing
  • Body steadiness cues
  • No-contact support language

What the programme includes

Sessions
7
Total minutes
91
Daily length
11 min

Includes deep-induction audio, quick-relief audio, bedtime or morning audio, affirmations, and a written script.

How this programme helps with hypnosis for heartbreak

Uses contact-urge delay, memory softening, and nervous-system grief pacing for breakup recovery. The audio is written to keep the change practical: you are guided to notice the exact cue, soften the body response, and rehearse a next step that fits the moment. Rather than promising to remove every thought, urge, or feeling, the programme gives you a calmer sequence to repeat until the new response feels easier to access.

Each session uses a different sensory anchor from the preview script, so the page is not only a keyword match. It is a programme with a specific behavioural target, a specific listening context, and a specific safety boundary. Mindglad uses wellness language because hypnosis audio should support your choices without replacing clinical care.

What science says

Imagery and emotion regulation after loss. Gentle imagery can support emotional pacing, but grief and breakup distress may also require human support. Source context: Grief support and imagery-based intervention literature.

Sample session script preview

[calm, warm, slow pace] Welcome. This Mindglad programme is for heartbreak and the urge to reopen contact. Find a position that feels steady, with your shoulders supported and your jaw allowed to soften. [short pause] You do not need to force anything. Let your attention settle on the simple rhythm of breathing in, and breathing out. Each out breath can be a small signal that this moment is different from the old pattern. Notice a warm hand over your chest and the ache moving through like weather. Let that sensation become a quiet marker for letting one wave pass without acting against your healing. As you listen, the mind can rehearse a more useful response: pausing, softening, choosing, and returning to what matters next. The rehearsal makes room for grief while adding a contact-delay cue, so longing is treated as a wave to care for rather than a command to obey. You may hear the old urge, worry, or thought pattern in the background. That is allowed. You are practising a different relationship with it, one where it can be present without taking over the next choice. [short pause] In a moment, count down from five to one. With each number, let the body learn the new cue. Five, more space around the thought. Four, more steadiness in the breath. Three, the next choice becoming clearer. Two, the old pattern losing volume. One, calm attention, here and now. When you are ready, take one deeper breath. Carry this cue with you today, and return to this programme whenever repetition would support the change.

FAQ

Can hypnosis for heartbreak help with contact urges?

This programme directly addresses contact urges. You practise waiting through the strongest wave, caring for the body, and choosing a supportive action before sending a message.

Will it make me forget my ex?

No. The aim is not erasing memory. Hypnosis for heartbreak may help memories feel less commanding, so remembering does not automatically become checking, texting, or replaying.

Is this for grief or breakups?

This page is specifically written for breakup heartbreak. If you are grieving a death or major bereavement, a grief-specific programme and human support may fit better.

What if I cry during the session?

Crying can happen. Keep the volume low, stay physically comfortable, and stop if you feel overwhelmed. The programme is designed to pace emotion rather than push through it.

Can I listen before bed?

Yes, especially if evenings are difficult. The bedtime version uses softer memory imagery and a clear cue to postpone decisions until morning.