Is this programme for you?
- Reassurance-delay cue
- Attachment alarm labelling
- Message-checking pause
- Body safety imagery
- Communication reset
Mindglad programme
This programme is designed for checking, reassurance seeking, and fear of losing connection. It helps you practise soothing the alarm before asking for reassurance, using calm guided voiceover, a short relief session, and repeatable cues you can return to when the old pattern gets loud.
Includes deep-induction audio, quick-relief audio, bedtime or morning audio, affirmations, and a written script.
Uses reassurance-delay imagery and attachment alarm labelling for people who spiral between messages. 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.
Hypnosis for anxiety symptoms. Meta-analytic evidence suggests hypnosis can reduce anxiety symptoms for some participants when used as a psychological support. Source context: Valentine et al., meta-analysis of hypnosis for anxiety.
[calm, warm, slow pace] Welcome. This Mindglad programme is for relationship anxiety and reassurance seeking. 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 your phone resting face down while the breath steadies in your belly. Let that sensation become a quiet marker for soothing the alarm before checking or asking again. As you listen, the mind can rehearse a more useful response: pausing, softening, choosing, and returning to what matters next. The rehearsal labels the attachment alarm, adds a reassurance-delay interval, and creates a calmer bridge between feeling afraid and communicating clearly. 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.
Yes. The programme includes a phone-down cue for the space between messages. You practise soothing the alarm before checking, rereading, or asking for reassurance again.
No. The audio does not dismiss real relationship issues. It helps you regulate first, so you can tell the difference between a useful conversation and an anxiety spiral.
They can, but the programme is written for the person experiencing relationship anxiety. It should not be used to pressure either partner or avoid honest communication.
Do not use self-soothing audio to stay in an unsafe situation. If there is coercion, abuse, threats, or fear for your safety, seek trusted human and professional support.
It focuses on attachment-specific cues: message checking, reassurance urges, fear of disconnection, and the body alarm that can appear before relationship conversations.