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Chest Tightness Anxiety Relief — Guided Meditation for Health Anxiety
Published 2 weeks ago
Description
⚠️ Important Note Before You Listen
If your chest tightness is new, sudden, or severe — especially if it is spreading to your arm, jaw, or back — please stop and call for emergency help or see a doctor immediately. That is always the right thing to do.
If this is a familiar feeling — a tightness that lives with your stress, your worry, your anxiety — then you are in exactly the right place.🫁 About This EpisodeChest tightness is one of the most frightening symptoms of anxiety — and one of the most misunderstood. In this 10-minute guided meditation for chest tightness and health anxiety, clinical hypnotherapist and former frontline paramedic Martin Hewlett walks you through exactly what is happening in your body, why it is not dangerous, and how to release it.
Using vagus nerve breathing, clinical hypnotherapy visualisation, and anxiety affirmations, this session is designed for anyone living with the physical symptoms of anxiety — tight chest, body tension, health anxiety, and the fear that something is seriously wrong.As a former paramedic, Martin knows the clinical difference between a body in medical danger and a nervous system caught in the anxiety loop. This episode speaks to that directly.
🕐 Episode Chapters
Repeat these twice in the session — see them in your mind's eye, in whatever colour and font feels right:
If your chest tightness is new, sudden, or severe — especially if it is spreading to your arm, jaw, or back — please stop and call for emergency help or see a doctor immediately. That is always the right thing to do.
If this is a familiar feeling — a tightness that lives with your stress, your worry, your anxiety — then you are in exactly the right place.🫁 About This EpisodeChest tightness is one of the most frightening symptoms of anxiety — and one of the most misunderstood. In this 10-minute guided meditation for chest tightness and health anxiety, clinical hypnotherapist and former frontline paramedic Martin Hewlett walks you through exactly what is happening in your body, why it is not dangerous, and how to release it.
Using vagus nerve breathing, clinical hypnotherapy visualisation, and anxiety affirmations, this session is designed for anyone living with the physical symptoms of anxiety — tight chest, body tension, health anxiety, and the fear that something is seriously wrong.As a former paramedic, Martin knows the clinical difference between a body in medical danger and a nervous system caught in the anxiety loop. This episode speaks to that directly.
🕐 Episode Chapters
- 00:00 — Important safety disclaimer — when to seek emergency help
- 00:44 — Welcome to Calming Anxiety — Martin Hewlett, clinical hypnotherapist & former paramedic
- 01:11 — Vagus nerve breathing — 4-2-6 technique to calm your nervous system
- 02:22 — How the long exhale slows your heart rate at a biological level
- 02:39 — Guided visualisation — the warm, golden room
- 03:28 — Bringing awareness to your chest without fear
- 03:58 — The paramedic perspective — anxiety vs medical danger
- 04:42 — Breathing into the tightness — releasing without fighting
- 05:19 — Affirmations — first pass
- 06:14 — Deepening into stillness
- 06:34 — Affirmations — second pass, settling into the subconscious
- 07:27 — Three daily caring tips for chest tightness anxiety
- 08:32 — Wake up and close
- 08:51 — Closing words — you chose calm today
- 09:11 — Anxiety Circuit Breaker course — calminganxiety.fm
Repeat these twice in the session — see them in your mind's eye, in whatever colour and font feels right:
- My chest is safe. My breath is proof.
- My body is not my enemy. It is doing its best for me.
- This tightness is anxiety, not danger. And anxiety passes.
- I am calm. I am steady. I am here.
- Name what it is. The next time chest tightness arrives, say quietly to yourself: "This is anxiety. I know what this is." Named things lose their power to frighten us.
- Breathe out longer than you breathe in. You don't need to remember a count — just make the exhale longer. That single habit activates the parasympathetic nervous system and begins to release the tension in your chest within seconds.
- Come back here. This session works with repetition. The more your nervous system hears that it is safe in this feeling, the faster it learns to release it. Return tomorrow.