Understanding how the conscious and subconscious mind

‘The law of life is the law of belief. A belief is a thought in your mind. Do not believe in things to harm or hurt. Believe in the power of your subconscious to heal, inspire, strengthen, and prosper you. According to your belief is it done unto you’. – Dr. Joseph Murphy

Conscious mind is 10% of our mind of which we are most aware. This part of the mind is responsible for logic and cognitive reasoning, decision making and will power. Subconscious mind is 90% of our mind that is mostly below the level of our awareness. This large percentage of the mind is responsible for reflective action and auto responses from nervous system. It contains the positive and negative associations (beliefs) that we’ve established through our life experiences.

“We must realize that the subconscious mind is the law of action and always expresses what the conscious mind has impressed on it. What we regularly entertain in our mind creates a conception of self. What we conceive ourselves to be, we become.” Grace Speare


1. Conscious Mind vs. Subconscious Mind

Conscious Mind

  • Definition: The conscious mind is the part of awareness you actively use — decision-making, reasoning, willpower, and focus.

  • Characteristics:

    • Processes information slowly (about 40–60 bits per second).

    • Handles logic, planning, abstract thinking.

    • Limited capacity — it can only focus on a handful of things at once.

    • When you’re learning a new skill (e.g., driving, speaking a new language), your conscious mind is engaged.

Subconscious Mind

  • Definition: The subconscious (or nonconscious in modern neuroscience) runs below conscious awareness. It stores automatic habits, beliefs, memories, and emotional conditioning.

  • Characteristics:

    • Processes information much faster (estimated 11 million bits per second).

    • Controls 90–95% of daily behaviour — your “autopilot.”

    • Governs reflexes, learned routines, and emotional triggers.

    • Examples: reaching for your phone without thinking, emotional reactions, posture, driving without realising the route.


2. Programmed Behavioural Patterns

  • How they form:

    • Repetition + emotional intensity wires patterns into neural circuits (Hebbian learning: “neurons that fire together wire together”).

    • Childhood experiences shape subconscious programs deeply because the brain is in more theta brainwave states (highly suggestible).

    • Over time, repeated behaviors become encoded as default neural pathways and reinforced by dopamine reward cycles.

  • Why they stick:

    • Once a pattern is automated, the brain conserves energy by defaulting to it (the brain uses about 20% of the body’s energy, so it favors efficiency).

    • Subconscious habits often override conscious intentions (e.g., consciously wanting to eat healthy but subconsciously reaching for comfort food).


3. Overcoming Programmed Patterns with Modern Science 

Here’s what the latest research highlights as effective:

Neuroplasticity

  • The brain remains highly adaptable throughout life.

  • To reprogram habits, one must interrupt old circuits and reinforce new ones through repetition, novelty, and emotional engagement.

  • Practices like cognitive reappraisal, mental rehearsal, and deliberate practice activate plasticity.

Mindfulness & Metacognition

  • Mindfulness allows conscious observation of subconscious patterns in real time.

  • Studies in 2023–2025 show that even brief daily mindfulness reduces the automaticity of stress reactions by weakening amygdala–prefrontal coupling.

Embodied Techniques (Bottom-Up Regulation)

  • Breathwork, heart-rate variability training, and somatic practices influence subconscious emotional regulation by calming the autonomic nervous system.

  • This shifts physiology out of “survival mode,” making it easier to consciously install new patterns.

Memory Reconsolidation

  • Neuroscience (Nader, Ecker, 2020s research) shows that when a memory or belief is reactivated and paired with a new emotional experience, it can be rewritten.

  • This is why therapies like EMDR, Internal Family Systems, or somatic experiencing are effective — they tap into subconscious programs while they’re “malleable.”

Visualization & Mental Rehearsal

  • fMRI studies (up to 2024) confirm the brain doesn’t strongly distinguish between vivid imagination and lived experience.

  • Mental rehearsal paired with emotion strengthens new circuits and primes subconscious behavior (e.g., athletes visualising perfect performance).

Behavioral Design & Environment

  • Subconscious patterns are cued by context.

  • Modern habit science emphasizes environmental engineering (changing cues, reducing friction, stacking new habits to old ones) to outsmart subconscious autopilot.


4. In Summary

  • Conscious mind = slow, logical, limited → “goal setter.”

  • Subconscious mind = fast, automatic, vast → “goal getter.”

  • Behavioral patterns = subconscious programs created through repetition and emotion.

  • Overcoming them requires leveraging neuroplasticity, mindfulness, emotional rewiring, and environmental cues.

In 2025, modern science is clear: lasting change happens not just through willpower (conscious), but through retraining the subconscious, aligning body, brain, and environment to support new ways of being.

Why celebrities turn to Hypnosis

“Mind Over Matter: How Celebrities Harnessed Hypnosis to Overcome Challenges”

Hypnosis often carries a mystique, but it’s increasingly recognized as a powerful tool for personal transformation. Whether faced with anxiety, addiction, physical pain, or performance pressure, a surprising number of celebrities have turned to hypnotherapy to overcome obstacles and unlock their potential. Here’s a look at some of their stories and what motivated them.

Celebrity Hypnosis Journeys

Jennifer Aniston

    • Challenge: Severe fear of flying
    • How hypnosis helped: She replaced comforting superstitions with hypnotherapy techniques, allowing her to manage flight anxiety noticeably better

Keira Knightley

    • Challenge: Anxiety and PTSD following intense early-career scrutiny
    • How hypnosis helped: Used hypnotherapy as a coping tool to manage stress and mental health during a period of emotional breakdown

Kyren Wilson (Snooker Champion)

    • Challenge: Career crisis and stress leading up to 2024 World Championship
    • How hypnosis helped: With just two weeks before the tournament, solution-focused hypnotherapy helped him visualize success, calm anxiety, improve his sleep, and ultimately win the title

Historical & Widely Reported Examples

Adele

    • Challenge: Smoking cessation and stage fright
    • How hypnosis helped: Found hypnotherapy instrumental in quitting smoking and regaining confidence for live performances

Matt Damon

    • Challenge: Smoking addiction
    • How hypnosis helped: Publicly stated that using hypnosis to quit smoking was “the best decision of my life”

Ellen DeGeneres, Ben Affleck, Charlize Theron, Drew Barrymore, Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman

    • Challenge: Smoking
    • How hypnosis helped: All credited hypnotherapy with successfully helping them quit smoking

Julia Roberts

    • Challenge: Stuttering
    • How hypnosis helped: She overcame speech impediments that could have hindered her acting career

Orlando Bloom, Lily Allen, Geri Halliwell, Sophie Dahl, Sarah Ferguson

    • Challenge: Weight issues, addictive cravings (e.g., chocolate)
    • How hypnosis helped: Used hypnotherapy for weight management and habit-breaking from early life through their careers

Debra Messing

    • Challenge: Fear of being underwater
    • How hypnosis helped: Overcame her phobia to confidently perform in a film role requiring underwater scenes

Jessica Alba & Kate Middleton (Princess of Wales)

    • Challenge: Pain, stress, or nausea during childbirth
    • How hypnosis helped: Both applied Hypno-Birthing techniques to manage labour, reducing medication reliance and increasing comfort

Princess Diana

    • Challenge: Public speaking anxiety and low confidence
    • How hypnosis helped: Hypnotherapy was used as a tool to bolster her confidence in public appearances

Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, David Beckham, Steve Hooker, Mary Lou Retton, Felix Baumgartner, Jim Thorpe, U.S. Olympic shooters

    • Challenge: Athletic performance, focus, and pain
    • How hypnosis helped: Utilized hypnosis and visualization to sharpen focus, manage pain, and achieve peak performance across sports—from golf and gymnastics to pole vaulting and extreme feats like skydiving

Why Hypnosis?

From these stories, we see several recurring themes:

  • Anxiety & Performance Stress: Jessica Aniston, Adele, Kyren Wilson
  • Addiction & Habit Breaking: Matt Damon, Ellen DeGeneres, Orlando Bloom
  • Physical & Emotional Pain: Debra Messing, childbirth experiences.
  • Mental Focus & Stamina for Peak Performance: Tiger Woods, Beckham, Sports stars
  • Public Speaking & Confidence: Princess Diana, Keira Knightley

These real-world examples illustrate that hypnotherapy is far from fringe—it’s a versatile, impactful tool used by many high-achievers to manage fears, addictions, performance pressure, and more.