About Jasmin
Certified Professional Hypnotist, Founder Of Elevate Mindworks, And Creator Of Shifted In Sixty
I Built Elevate From Experience, Not Theory.
I’m Jasmin Nass, CHt, Mind Relief + Pattern Update Specialist, founder of Elevate Mindworks, and creator of Shifted In Sixty.
My work sits at the intersection of hypnosis, deep listening, subconscious change, and real-life integration.
I’m not interested in performance-based healing.
I’m not interested in insight that sounds good but doesn’t hold when life gets real.
And I’m not interested in asking capable people to keep overriding themselves in the name of growth.
The work I trust is more precise than that.
More specific.
More respectful of the mind.
More interested in what’s actually happening beneath the explanation.
That’s what led me here.
This Work Was Personal Before It Became Professional.
I didn’t come to hypnosis because it sounded interesting.
I came to it after trying many of the things people are told should help.
Counseling.
Books.
Retreats.
Meditation.
Personal development.
Mindset work.
Reflection.
Some of it helped.
Some of it gave me language.
Some of it allowed me to understand myself more clearly.
But there were still places inside me that insight alone hadn’t changed.
I could understand something after it happened yet still feel the same internal pull when life pressed on the tender place again.
That gap mattered to me.
Hypnosis gave me a different way in.
Not because it was dramatic.
Not because it bypassed my awareness.
Because it helped me work with my mind from inside the experience instead of trying to analyze my way through it from the outside.
That changed the direction of my life.
The Mind Doesn’t Need To Be Forced. It Needs To Be Understood.
My earliest experiences with hypnosis were more scripted.
They were helpful.
But over time, both in my own work and in sessions with clients, I became more interested in what happened when hypnosis became inquiry-driven instead of simply delivered.
When there was room to notice.
Room to speak.
Room to follow what surfaced.
Room to ask better questions.
Room to listen beneath the first explanation.
That changed how I approached this work.
I began to see that the mind is rarely random.
The overthinking.
The guilt.
The pressure.
The shutdown.
The over-responsibility.
The bracing.
The need to stay useful, prepared, impressive, pleasing, controlled, or ahead of what might go wrong.
These aren’t personality flaws.
They’re often intelligent adaptations that made sense somewhere along the way.
The problem isn’t that they existed.
The problem is when they keep shaping a life they no longer belong in.
That’s where I believe the work becomes meaningful.
Not in shaming the mind.
Not in forcing a new identity over an old strategy.
But in understanding what the mind has been protecting, and what it no longer needs to carry.
I Don’t Believe Deep Change Should Feel Like Another Performance.
I take this work seriously because people bring real things into it.
Their relationships.
Their confidence.
Their grief.
Their resentment.
Their self-trust.
Their private coping.
Their perfectionism.
Their exhaustion.
Their desire to stop becoming someone they don’t recognize under pressure.
That deserves steadiness.
It deserves discernment.
It deserves someone who can hold depth without making it dramatic.
I don’t rush people into places they’re not ready to go.
I don’t treat every reaction like something to get rid of.
I don’t reduce a person’s inner world to a script.
I don’t ask clients to impress me, perform for me, or explain perfectly to be taken seriously.
And I don’t believe meaningful change comes from fighting the mind hard enough until it finally gives in.
My role is to listen carefully, guide precisely, and respect the intelligence of the mind while helping it stop using strategies that are no longer serving the person’s life.
I Listen For What The Explanation Leaves Out.
People often come in with the explanation they’ve already given themselves a hundred times.
They know the story.
They know the trigger.
They know what they “should” do.
They know what they wish felt different.
I listen for the part underneath that.
The hesitation before the answer.
The sentence that sounds logical but lands heavy.
The place where someone says, “I know this doesn’t make sense, but…”
The guilt that appears the second they imagine choosing themselves.
The pressure that shows up when they talk about rest.
The guarded laugh before they say something true.
The part of the story they’ve normalized because they’ve lived with it for so long.
The difference between what someone says they want and what their mind still seems to be protecting.
That’s often where the work becomes specific.
Not because I know more about someone than they do.
But because the mind often shows what matters through the details most people have learned to explain away.
I Built Elevate For The Kind Of Change That Has To Hold In Real Life.
Elevate Mindworks exists because I believe capable people deserve work that is as thoughtful, specific, and serious as the inner change they’re trying to make.
Not forced.
Not a generic fix.
Not more complicated for the sake of sounding important.
Just intentional enough to reach what has actually been happening.
Specific and focused enough to make change possible.
And respectful enough to work with the mind instead of turning it into the problem.
So the life you’ve worked so hard to build can feel more livable, aligned, and yours again.