9 Tips for Coping with Panic Attacks
- Cut down on caffeine to lower your overall anxiety level. This is some serious low-hanging fruit that will reduce your baseline level of anxiety, making it harder for your body to panic. Wondering how to reduce your caffeine consumption? Here are some tips:
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- If you don’t get a headache or other withdrawal symptoms from skipping all caffeine, then just go for it! Replace your current caffeinated beverages with their decaffeinated counterparts, or switch to water.
- If you get a headache or feel really tired when you don’t have your morning coffee, start off more slowly. Try reducing your caffeine amount by about 25% per week. For example, you could cut down from four cups of coffee to three for a week, and so forth. Or, you could replace about a quarter of your coffee with decaffeinated if you want to keep drinking four cups.
- Try some ibuprofen and short naps for any withdrawal symptoms, which typically include fatigue and headaches.
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- Green or black tea is like methadone for coffee! Switch to caffeinated tea once you are down to minimal coffee, but not quite ready for a total caffeine detox.
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- Give yourself about two weeks to the finish line, depending on how much coffee or other caffeine you have been consuming. If you miss the ritualistic aspects of having a hot morning beverage, experiment with herbal tea, hot lemon water, and decaffeinated coffee to find what you like the best.
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2. If you notice exercise-induced panic symptoms, shift to gentler exercise.
Try walking or yoga while you work on reducing or eliminating panic attacks. But don’t stop exercising! Regular movement is an important part of managing anxiety. If intense exercise is not related to your panic symptoms, then there is no need to decrease your level of exertion.
Yin yoga uses passive, longer-held poses to target connective tissues. It is usually relaxing, although some poses can be intense. At least you know your heart rate won’t get high, and if the stretching feels like too much, just back off.
3. Learn to breathe.
Sounds ridiculous, right? After all, if you’re alive, you’ve been breathing constantly for years.
But, there are ways of breathing that increase your physical tension and anxiety, and ways of breathing that will relax you. Here is an entire article about breathing better.
In the midst of coping with panic attacks, take several slow, deep breaths, and continue to focus on slow, deep breaths for the duration of the panic attack.
Practicing yoga regularly will help you regulate your breathing better, as well as provide movement that is so crucial to regulating your nervous system downwards, away from that fight-or-flight mode.
4. Practice meditation and/or relaxation regularly.
If you practice relaxation and correct breathing when you’re not having a panic attack, it will work better when you need it.
Meditation and relaxation exercises strengthen your relaxation “muscle”, making it easier to relax your body when you’re feeling anxious. Meditation is transformative far beyond just managing panic attacks, as I discuss in the article “5 ‘Woo-woo’ things Backed by Science”.
Guess what, yoga will also provide an avenue for meditation and relaxation. What yoga class doesn’t involve attention to the breath, mindfulness, and at least a few glorious minutes in corpse pose?
5. Learn how to be unafraid of panic.
This can be a tough one. When you’re coping with panic attacks, your primitive brain is very compelling in convincing you that you are in danger. Your alarm bells are going off, and it is beyond unpleasant.
But ironically, the less scared you are of panicking, the less likely it is that you will experience panic.
And remember, unpleasant is not the same as dangerous. You are not in danger, it just feels like you are, and feelings are not facts.
6. Know that it will pass.
The peak of a panic attack usually lasts about ten minutes, though you may feel an “anxiety hangover” for longer than that.
During the most stressful part of the anxiety attack, tell yourself that it will pass, and that you are safe. Let it wash over you like a wave, even visualizing it as a wave passing over you.
Fleeing from the situation will only reinforce the perception that your panic attacks are unbearable and dangerous. If you sit and allow the symptoms to pass, you will gain confidence in your ability to cope, and your nervous system will begin to learn that panic-y feelings are not dangerous.
7. Find mantras that work for you.
When you are panicking, repeat them to yourself while you breathe. Examples to try: “I am safe.” “These feelings will pass.” “This is uncomfortable but not dangerous.” “I am breathing through this.” Experiment to find the ones that work best for you.
8. Focus your attention on something external.
Distract yourself by focusing outside your own body and symptoms. For example:
- Try counting backwards in threes from 100.
- Recall the words from a favorite song.
- Concentrate on the sights and sounds around you, by naming five things you can see, four things you can hear, three things you can touch, and two things you can smell.
Again, experiment to find what works best for you.
9. Therapy really helps!
In therapy, you can find help and support to recalibrate your body’s response to situations and thoughts that cause you to panic. You can get your nervous system back in balance, and learn ways of managing anxiety and coping with panic attacks that open up avenues for you to live with more calm, confidence and freedom.
One of my mantras is “Anxiety is Treatable!” and I have seen its truth proven time and time again.
If you are interested in seeking therapy for panic attacks and other forms of anxiety, I invite you to reach out to me. I am authorized to see clients in 40 states for online therapy.
You can schedule a 15-minute phone consultation with me right now to see if we are a good fit to work together. If I’m not available to be your therapist, I can provide you with appropriate resources so that you can find the help you are looking for.
Schedule a Free 15-min. Phone Consultation with Dr. Bobbi Ballard
2 replies on “9 Essential Tips for Coping with Panic Attacks”
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[…] Related resources you may find helpful include this free download on shifting out of anxiety: “Anxious Artist’s 1-Minute Mindset Shift” and this article: “9 Tips for Coping with Panic Attacks“. […]