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Contact
Georgina and make an appointment to quit smoking today with Hypnosis
For
quitting smoking and all other issues:
Here are directions from the A14; from the Kettering Hospital and from
the Kettering Crematorium
Directions
from the A14
- Get
off the A14 at junction 7 and travel up the slip road to the roundabout.
- At
the roundabout take the turning for the Kettering town centre and General
Hospital.
- Continue
on this road for about 400 yds. Look for a cemetery on your left and
you will see a turning on your right opposite the cemetery - turn right
here. This is Gypsy Lane.
- (continue
journey with "Directions from Gipsy lane
" below)
Directions from the Kettering General Hospital
- Go
past the Kettering General Hospital on your left and go up the hill
to the roundabout.
- Go straight
over the roundabout and take the first turning left into Gypsy Lane
- (continue
journey with "Directions from Gipsy lane" below)
Directions from the Kettering Crematorium
- Opposite
the crematorium is Gypsy Lane - take this turning
- (continue
journey with "Directions from Gipsy lane" below)
Directions
from Gipsy lane
- As
soon as you have turned into Gypsy Lane immediately turn right towards
Loddington.
- After
approx 2.0 miles, you will pass the sign saying "Loddington please
drive carefully". After the sign take the second turning right.
This is Parklands Close. The clinic is the second house on the right.
Parking
There
is plenty of parking space outside the clinic.
Printing
These Directions:
Click
here to print the directions on this page
Quitting with Hynosis
Possibly one of the strongest indicators of the effect of nicotine is
the discrepancy between the desire to quit and quitting success rates.
Surveys have shown that the majority of smokers (around 70 per cent) want
to stop smoking yet the successful quit rate remains very low.
Why
is this?
It is because
they don't use hypnosis. They go on a course of treatment and try using
their willpower. Quitting with Willpower is not the answer.
Twenty per cent or less of those who embark on a course of treatment succeed
in abstaining for as long as a year, while only around 3 per cent succeed
in quitting using willpower alone. Most smokers take several attempts
to stop before they finally succeed.
The
power of addiction is also demonstrated by the fact that some smokers
are reluctant to stop smoking even after undergoing surgery for smoking-induced
diseases. Around forty per cent of those who have had a laryngectomy try
smoking soon afterwards, while about 50 per cent of lung cancer patients
resume smoking after undergoing surgery.
The
power of stopping with hypnosis is permanent because willpower is not
the key - the keys are desire and imagination. The desire to quit smoking
and then the imagination is used to retrain the brain.
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