Thanatophobia is not a character flaw. It is a fear that can take up a lot of space in a life: sleep, relationships, the ability to enjoy the present. Hypnotherapy is one of the most direct tools for working on it.

How it shows up

Fear of death takes different forms depending on the person. For some, it is an intrusive thought that returns without warning. For others, it is constant vigilance around health, difficulty relaxing, or anxiety that rises every night at bedtime. It can also show up as fear of a loved one's death rather than one's own.
  • Intrusive thoughts about death that interrupt the flow of the day
  • Anxiety at bedtime or during the night
  • Hypervigilance around physical symptoms or health
  • Avoiding topics, places, or situations connected to death
  • Intense fear of a loved one dying rather than of your own death
  • Difficulty enjoying the present because of a sharp awareness of finitude

What hypnotherapy can offer

Hypnotherapy works directly on the automatic response the nervous system produces when faced with thoughts of death. Rather than trying to reason the fear away, it accesses its emotional and physical dimension, where the fear actually lives.
1

Gradual desensitization

The hypnotic state allows approaching thoughts of death in a context of calm and safety, and gradually changing the emotional response they trigger. This work happens at your pace, without forcing you to go where you're not ready to go.

2

Restoring sleep

Anxiety around death often disrupts sleep, through intrusive thoughts at bedtime or nighttime waking. Targeted sessions focused on nervous system regulation, combined with self-hypnosis exercises, help restore more stable sleep.

3

Finding the root

Fear of death sometimes hides something else: fear of losing control, of suffering, of separation from loved ones, or of a life not fully lived. Hypnotherapy helps identify what is actually feeding the fear so it can be addressed precisely.

What coaching can offer

Coaching complements hypnotherapy. It helps put words to what is happening, identify triggers, and build concrete habits that reduce background anxiety symptoms in daily life.
1

Understanding your triggers

What sets the fear off? A word, an image, a physical sensation, a news story? Naming your triggers is the first step to not being caught off guard by them.

2

Lowering background anxiety symptoms

Coaching helps put concrete habits in place (breathing, present-moment grounding, evening routines) that bring down baseline anxiety symptoms that fear latches onto.

What this support is not

My support is not psychotherapy. I am not a psychologist or psychotherapist. If your fear of death is part of a broader picture of severe generalized anxiety, OCD, or depression, psychological or psychiatric care is recommended alongside or before this kind of work.

What I offer is a non-clinical space, with hypnotherapy and coaching tools, for people whose fear of death is getting in the way of their quality of life without requiring heavy clinical intervention.

Frequently asked questions

Very common. Fear of death can seem irrational from the outside — everyone dies, so why be so afraid of it? — which makes it hard to bring up without feeling judged. That's exactly why having a space like this can help.

Often, yes. Losing someone close can make death feel much more real and near. That's a normal response, but it can become fixed and intrusive. The support takes that context into account.

Not necessarily. In hypnotherapy, we work on the emotional and physical response, not always on the intellectual content. Some people find it easier precisely because they don't have to argue against their own fear.

Yes. Sessions are available in person in Anjou (Montreal) or online. Hypnotherapy works well online, as long as you have a quiet place to be.

Fear of death taking up too much space?

A free 30-minute discovery call, no commitment, to see if this support is right for you.

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