Every review on this page is real — written by clients in their own words. This is what the work actually looks like.
My experience doing hypnotherapy with Ellen was SO TRANSFORMATIVE. Through hypnotherapy, Ellen helped me call all those parts of myself back in and I feel like I am operating as a complete person again. It's been 4 months since I did my 30-day intensive with Ellen and I'm STILL feeling the effects of the shifts. My work with Ellen caused positive permanent shifts within myself and it's been a ripple-effect ever since.
She helped me uncover and process childhood trauma that I didn't even realize was still affecting me. What made her approach so powerful was how she connected those past experiences to what I was experiencing in my body today. She created such a safe, grounded space — if you're looking for someone who blends deep emotional healing with mindful, body-centered awareness, she is truly gifted at what she does.
Ellen is insightful and identified issues and themes that I would not have been able to pinpoint on my own. She cares deeply about her clients and I felt supported at every stage of the process. I noticed significant changes immediately after our first hypnotherapy session.
Ellen guided me through spaces of reunion, healing and expansion with gentleness, grace and wisdom. I found validation, peace of mind and liberation in my Past Life Regression session. Her nonjudgmental, kind and professional manner helped me feel prepared, safe and supported throughout the experience.
WOW. We got deep, and I really felt a massive shift. She gets at the heart of what's really troubling you and comes up with a custom solution through hypnosis to reprogram your brain. I am very impressed and very excited about what's to come for me.
I have had two sessions and the changes in me are astounding. I feel a freedom I have never known before. My good memories are mine again; the past has fallen into peace. Ellen has been responsive, caring, and gentle. Her guidance, care, and concern made the process bearable and relatively easy. I look forward to every day now. I smile, I sing, I dance. I am living a whole life again, and that, for me, is EVERYTHING.
Working with Ellen has quite literally changed my life. I am calmer, happier and able to flow with life as it comes with a steady strength. I am more present with my kids and am better able to help them regulate now that I can stay regulated myself. I cannot recommend her enough.
My session with Ellen was magnificent. She went through an entire life with me — a life filled with grief and loss, but it was so powerful to have that understanding in this life. This session helped me understand where my fear of loss came from. It was also a beautiful reminder that even when things get tough, there is always time to start anew.
Working with Ellen changed my life and I truly mean that. I had been struggling with a hair-pulling disorder since I was a teen. No medications, cognitive behavioral therapy or other strategies I've tried have worked to put it behind me until I worked with Ellen. Not once have I even been tempted to hair pull since my work with Ellen. I feel beyond relieved that something finally worked.
My RTT session with Ellen was completely transformational. The amount I was able to process through in one ninety-minute session was amazing. Typically it would take me months of traditional talk therapy to get to those places of clarity. Hypnotherapy was the missing link for me in my healing journey.
In just 6 weeks I was able to overcome a lifelong phobia that had previously disrupted my daily life. As a result, during a recent vacation I was able to include activities I NEVER thought I'd enjoy. My thoughts around the phobia have shifted from "I will avoid" to "I actively seek out opportunities to engage." I wish I'd done this sooner.
I can't stop smiling after my PLR session with Ellen. I left feeling empowered and confident. Ellen's soothing and warm voice guided me through deep layers of who I was and what is my soul's purpose. The session felt like taking a journey with a close friend. I cannot recommend her enough.
Running into Ellen was no coincidence — it felt like a divine appointment in my journey. Working with her is like having a soul coach: someone who doesn't just guide you but helps you uncover the wisdom and power already within. Since working with her, friends and family have noticed a real shift in me — more patience, more grounding, more grace.
My anxiety, fear, and stress levels have decreased to almost zero. My mind and body are calmer and more balanced. She made the process super easy to understand with clear communication, support, and personal interest in helping me heal. This is a rare quality to find today in a person.
Ellen is magical beyond words. I have done two hypnosis sessions and a past life regression with Ellen and my life is forever changed. I have shed my perfectionist and workaholic tendencies, and have grown into a more comfortable, easy-going state of being. She has a calm, approachable demeanor that invites you to explore your subconscious in a curious and hopeful way.
Working with Ellen has been one of the most transformative experiences on my healing journey. I came in carrying anxiety, struggling with self-worth, and feeling disconnected from my true voice. Her approach to inner child healing helped me uncover and release patterns I didn't even realize were driving my discomfort.
My session with Ellen was INCREDIBLY powerful. I was BLOWN AWAY by her ability to bring me back to places and memories that live in my subconscious mind that I had NO IDEA were contributing to how negative patterns and behaviors have been playing out in my life. I left the session feeling transformed and empowered to move forward in alignment with my desired reality.
I completed 6 weeks of rapid transformational therapy with Ellen and all I can say is "wow." I could never have realized how much my life could shift on so many levels: body, mind, health, spirit, career, relationship, self-limiting beliefs. I entered in a funky confused state, and I am exiting with clarity, motivation, and determination to step fully into the life I've always envisioned.
Each story below is real — shared with full permission and anonymized. These are composite snapshots of the intake, the work, and where they landed.
Ashley came to Ellen wanting to heal her relationship with her mother and sister — years of feeling triggered, judged, dismissed, and chronically unheard had built into something that drained her daily. Even on the days they weren't interacting, thoughts about them had a way of taking up space in the background of everything. Ashley is also a mother, and she was deeply aware that she didn't want these patterns to be what her daughter grew up around.
She desperately wanted her mother and sister to change — but knew that was an uphill battle that would only create more frustration. She needed to stop being at the mercy of how they behaved. The work went inward, into her inner dialogue and the younger versions of her who had decided that not being heard meant something about her worth, and who had learned that frustration and control were the only ways to feel safe.
By her 30-day check-in, she reported feeling a new empathy and understanding for where her family members were in their own journeys. She was no longer carrying the weight of trying to change them. Feeling triggered dropped from a 9 to a 1. Judgment dropped from a 10 to a 2. Resentment from a 7.5 to a 1. And she was able to be calm and centered in their presence in a way that had never felt possible before — not because they had changed, but because she had.
T. leads a global team of thousands and, by every external measure, is accomplished and respected. Yet privately, the gap between how capable she appeared and how unsettled she felt had grown impossible to ignore. She was drinking when she didn't want to and cycling through shame about it.
She had tried discipline and accountability. Nothing lasted. The sabotage felt almost automatic, as if some part of her pulled back the moment she began to feel proud. Beneath the behavior was a quieter belief she had never fully named — that being fully successful, fully healthy, fully aligned might somehow be too much. That something had to remain slightly broken.
The urge to drink wasn't the problem. It was a pressure valve. Once that internal tension was identified and brought into awareness, the pattern lost its authority.
The shifts were structural, not forced. Shame and guilt, both at a 10, resolved to zero. Urges to drink dropped from a 10 to a 0. Imposter syndrome disappeared. The lifelong sense of "brokenness" dissolved. Across all six tracked symptoms, her average reduction was 95%.
More importantly, the internal foundation changed. Self-trust rose from a 1 to a 7.5. Worthiness moved from a 4 to an 8.5. She described feeling free — not through willpower, but from the inside out.
For the first time, she wasn't succeeding everywhere except with herself. She was succeeding as herself.
K. came into the work during an intense season of life. She was adjusting to motherhood with a seven-month-old baby, recovering from a difficult birth, and grieving the loss of her father. At the same time, her family had recently moved across the country and her mother had moved in with them, creating a new household dynamic.
She was doing everything she could to hold it all together. But internally she felt constantly on edge.
Motherhood had awakened a deep pressure to get everything right. She worried about feeding, sleep, routines, and every decision that might affect her baby. She carried the mental load of the household and found it difficult to relax or let things be imperfect. Even small moments could trigger self-doubt or frustration.
The work focused on helping her find something she had rarely felt before: inner safety. Instead of trying to control every detail, she began learning to trust herself. The critical voice that pushed her toward perfection softened, and her confidence in her instincts as a mother began to grow.
Over three cycles, the shift became clear. Feeling not good enough reduced from a 10 to a 2. Self-love increased from a 1 to an 8. Self-acceptance rose from a 2 to an 8. Joy moved from a 1 to a 9. Enjoyment of motherhood climbed from a 3 to a 9.
Motherhood no longer felt like a test she had to pass. It felt like something she could grow into with trust, patience, and compassion for herself.
K.R. had done everything right. Residential treatment, IOP, a dietitian, Overeaters Anonymous, years of therapy. She knew all the tools. Something kept her from actually using them.
When her father died unexpectedly from cancer, grief collided with patterns she had been managing for years and control tightened.
After one Rapid Healing Immersion cycle, she reflected: "The hypnotherapy is allowing me to take everything I've done before and actually use it and integrate it. I refused to use those tools because it meant I needed to let go of what kept me in control."
Slowly, the grip loosened. She stopped structuring her life around fear and began living it from choice. Food and weight stopped being the organizing principle of her days. She moved through social situations without calculating how to be "enough." She recognized her own professional value and started charging accordingly. The hypervigilant OCD that had run her life dropped by 88%. Self-trust went from a 2 to a 9.5. Joy in self-care, which had been a 1, reached an 8.
C. got divorced at 40 after years of a relationship that had left her second-guessing everything. She described what the gaslighting had done to her simply: "brain damage." She'd been a stay-at-home mom, now financially stranded, and feeling like she was starting over again.
Underneath the practical overwhelm was a story she'd been carrying much longer — the middle child, the black sheep, the one who'd been told she'd fail. People-pleasing so automatic she'd built her whole personality around making sure no one was disappointed. Fear of failure kept her from trying things that interested her.
The early shifts surprised her. She noticed she wasn't ruminating about her ex for hours anymore. She could stay working without wanting to quit. Anxiety still moved through her body at times — but her mind stayed steady. By her 30-day check-in, she'd stood up to a friend calmly, ended a situationship without heartbreak, spoken directly about what she wanted — and didn't take any of it personally.
Joy rose from a 3 to a 10. Worthiness from a 1 to a 9. Boundaries from a 2 to a 10. She wasn't starting over. She was starting from a place that was finally her own.
L. had spent fifteen years wanting to be on stage. She trained seriously, performed often, and knew exactly how it felt to drop into flow under the lights. When she danced, she felt confident and alive. What she struggled with was everything around it.
Anxiety had been running quietly in the background since she was fourteen. Stepping into bigger opportunities felt like risk. Driving made her tense. Leaving the house could trigger stress. Auditions carried pressure, and when they did not work out, part of her felt relieved because it meant she did not have to move or fully step into independence.
What the work uncovered was not a lack of talent or discipline. It was a nervous system still trying to prevent the kind of overwhelm she had once survived. Fear of independence tracked at an 8 and dropped to a 1. Overwhelm fell from a 9 to a 3. Performance anxiety moved from a 9 to a 4. The self-sabotage that had once felt automatic loosened its grip.
But the more meaningful shifts were behavioral. She rented a studio, filmed choreography, and started training daily. She stopped a skin-picking habit she had never even named as a goal. Driving no longer triggered tension.
At her 30-day update, she said something simple: "I'm a different person now."
She made the decision to move cities permanently to pursue dance. She no longer felt relief when opportunities fell through. Her dreams felt realistic. Watching other dancers, which once triggered comparison, now felt inspiring. Even when uncertainty surfaced, she trusted herself to navigate it.
N. is a healthcare provider with a full patient load. She cares deeply and gives generously, carrying her patients' stories with her long after the workday ends. By the time she walks through her front door to two young boys, much of her energy has already been spent.
Her pregnancies and births were intense in different ways. One ended in miscarriage. One required an emergency shift in plans. Another led to weeks living in the NICU. In the years that followed, her body developed Hashimoto's and ongoing immune reactivity. She responded the way she had always responded to challenge. She researched, optimized, adjusted supplements, tried to perfect her health the same way she had perfected achievement.
Her drive had always been strong. Her father modeled that standard, and he passed away before seeing her reach a milestone she had worked years toward. She never truly paused to grieve him, or the births, or the pressure she carried.
What shifted was not her commitment to her health, but her relationship with it. She began to separate caring for herself from performing wellness. Instead of correcting her body, she started listening to it. She described feeling steadier. Less driven by urgency. More able to pause and actually enjoy her life. She returned home lighter, more emotionally available, and more at ease in her own skin.
L. had done a lifetime of healing work. Long-term sobriety. Years of therapy. Intensive outpatient treatment. Yoga, journaling, spirituality, 12-step. She understood her patterns intellectually — where they began, how approval-seeking had formed early, why she was drawn to certain "types" of men.
And yet she found herself in another relationship she knew wasn't healthy, unable to fully step away. Not because she lacked awareness, but because the subconscious pull toward that dynamic was deeply engrained. She described it like an addiction: the 5% of the time when the connection felt real made the other 95% feel tolerable.
What the work reached was the part of her that had decided, long before she could have known otherwise, that this was what love looked like and what she deserved. Once that belief was surfaced and integrated, the pull lost its authority.
Attraction to narcissistic partners, which she had tracked at a 9.5, moved to zero. Fear of rejection dropped from a 10 to a 1. Codependency decreased from an 8 to a 2. Healthy independence rose from a 2 to a 9. Self-worth moved from a 3 to a 9.
She stopped defending herself to people who couldn't hear her. The change wasn't about resisting temptation or managing the pattern better — it was about no longer being magnetized to what hurt. She didn't have to fight it anymore. She simply stopped choosing it.
A. and her husband had been together for decades. Their relationship was real and loving. But underneath that love, she carried a constant undercurrent of fear.
It showed up as overthinking. As scanning. As feeling unsettled when he pulled inward or focused elsewhere. Small moments could activate something much bigger inside her.
The roots were early. A childhood marked by instability had shaped an anxious attachment pattern that followed her into adulthood. When he left for a weekend, she felt untethered. When he was distracted, she felt deprioritized. A subtle codependency had formed where her sense of safety rose and fell with his availability.
What she wanted wasn't more reassurance from him. It was freedom from the fear itself. To feel secure because she was secure within. To develop her own rhythms, interests, and confidence without worrying that independence might create distance. To love him without bracing for loss.
Over three cycles, that's what shifted. Insecurity dropped from an 8 to a 1.5. Fear of abandonment resolved. Anxious thoughts that once ran at a 7 fell to 1.5. Confidence rose from a 4 to a 9. Independence, something she once approached cautiously, rose to a 9 as well.
She described handling family conflict with calm, staying responsive rather than reactive. When her husband was on his phone, she no longer built a story in her head. When he left town, she did not spiral. The marriage didn't change. She did.
S. had spent years carrying something heavy and unresolved — not fully able to name it, not fully able to set it down. The weight of it showed up everywhere: in confidence that would disappear without explanation, in things she'd start and never finish, in the persistent feeling that everyone else had a rulebook she'd never been given. She'd done talk therapy, EMDR, and everything else available to her. She was still stuck.
Through the work with Ellen, she was able to recover lost memories that had been shaping her life from beneath the surface. Accessing them gave her something she hadn't had before: understanding. The patterns that had seemed random finally had a source. And with that, the energy that had been locked in examining and analyzing for years began to release.
The changes that followed were quiet but profound. She stopped feeling like a little girl waiting to grow up. She became less reactive and more observant — present in a way that felt new. She began nurturing her closest friendships with more intention and ease. She committed to learning a foreign language and stuck with it, noticing success where she'd always expected failure. "I can't even explain to you how much better I feel," she said in a follow-up session. "It's like it all just disappeared. All the energy went out of it. It's almost jarring because I don't think about it anymore."
Every story on this page began with one decision. A free, no-pressure consultation — that's all it takes to start.
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