Poging GOUD - Vrij

I thought manifesting was "woo-woo" - but it can realise your dreams'

Psychologies UK

|

March 2025

Focusing on your goals can make them happen, celebrated hypnotherapist Paul McKenna tells Hannah Stephenson

I thought manifesting was "woo-woo" - but it can realise your dreams'

Self-help guru Paul McKenna was in the red when he first started manifesting in the early Eighties, while trying to get his hypnotic London theatre show off the ground. He cut out the red 'overdrawn' figure on his bank statement and glued in its place a new number, which said £77,000 in credit.

As he tried to manifest financial freedom, he also imagined walking out to perform to a full house, hearing the applause and feeling success.

A few weeks later he got the London theatre show which would kickstart his self-help career. Within months he was in credit beyond the £77,000, but only after he'd taken a photo of himself next to the 'House Full' sign at the theatre before a new run, pinning it on his fridge and repeatedly imagining what it would be like to play to a full house.

The self-help whizz, who has worked with stars including James Corden, Ellen DeGeneres and Simon Cowell, and has trained thousands of hypnotherapists, asserts that if you can visualise success and focus your energy on your goals, you can make them happen.

He has made a fortune promising to make people sleep, happy, rich, thin, positive or confident, selling more than 10 million books, with his work translated into 32 languages. He's keen that his latest book, Power Manifesting, dispels any myths surrounding the practice and aims to actively encourage people to visualise, focus on and realise their dreams. He's embarking on a UK and Ireland tour in March to spread the word.

He understands that the idea of manifesting, which he defines as 'imagining something and making it a reality', might seem what he calls 'woo-woo'. He's been manifesting longer than most: he discovered the idea when he was a DJ at Capital Radio in the Nineties, but felt he wasn't realising his potential. A colleague suggested he try manifesting, and he recalls one friend who was able to manifest parking spaces in central London time after time.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

FORGET INTROVERT AND EXTROVERT, COULD YOU BE AN 'otrovert'?

Most people find it hard to imagine what it feels like to have no group loyalty: to not feel any particular affinity to your nationality, ethnicity, religion, or to your chosen profession, a particular sports team, or your alma mater. These group affiliations form partly because local cultures are diverse, and even small differences can be enough to bind people together — or set them apart.

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

IS TECHNOLOGY KEEPING US STUCK IN THE PAST?

Back in the day, if you had a horrible boss, or a relationship that ended on a sour note, you could process the situation and move on.

time to read

4 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Do you need a POWER PAUSE?

As women, we are told to push. Long before childbirth and in almost everything we do. As a result, we tell ourselves to ‘lean in’, ‘hustle’ and ‘keep going’, as we power on through the relentless, back-to-back demands of our daily lives. As we push harder, we sleep less, hoping that somehow our fatigued bodies and foggy minds will catch up. We are so scared to stop.

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

The joys of seasonal eating

Raymond Blanc explains how everyone thought he was 'weird' when he introduced a vegetarian menu 40 years ago, and why he still loves veg

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

INTO THE uni mindset

As thousands fly the nest and head off to university, many parents will be anxious about how their kids will cope with living alone as well as studying. After all, when a new study showed that a quarter of uni-aged kids can't even boil an egg, it looks like they've got reason to worry!

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

YOU DON'T HAVE TO smile

Most of us were taught from a young age to be polite — to smile, to say thank you, to make others feel comfortable.

time to read

3 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

FEEL THE FEAR

I gaze out the window as the countryside whizzes by in a green blur. Through my much-loved earphones, I listen to the album Scarlet's Walk by Tori Amos — music that has gotten me through much more difficult experiences than this, I remind myself. Because this — although nerve-wracking — is nothing compared to the challenges I have faced in life so far. Really, giving a talk to a room of strangers around my passion — careers in writing — is pretty straightforward stuff.

time to read

5 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

DR ALEX GEORGE: If a food makes you feel bad, that's your body telling you something'

After weighing over 20st and struggling with grief and depression two and a half years ago, Dr Alex George says his ‘diet was poor’, he wasn’t exercising and was ‘consuming too much alcohol and processed foods’.

time to read

3 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

Can I finally stand still?

In a new city, in a new life, Caro Giles wonders if she has at last found home

time to read

3 mins

October 2025

Psychologies UK

Psychologies UK

THE HIDDEN COST OF caring

It’s been raining for days. I fantasise about floating away. We all agree that this wet week feels like the longest week ever. I’m counting down the hours until I can escape to Glasgow and be with Joe, and shut the mother away in a box. All week my two little ones, Tess and Emmie, have been as changeable as the sea, sitting at a piano singing Taylor Swift songs one moment, and brimming with worries the next.

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size