Lesson 1
What Is Actually Happening In Your Body
This opening lesson explains the physiology of panic in plain, accessible terms, covering the brain's alarm system, the fight-or-flight response, and why the body reacts the same way to danger regardless of its actual size or nature. It introduces the feedback loop between physical sensation and catastrophic thought that allows panic to escalate quickly, and includes a brief, clear statement about the limits of this course in relation to medical advice. Listeners leave with a foundational understanding that reframes panic as a misfiring protective system rather than evidence that something is wrong with their body.
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Lesson 2
Why Panic Feels Like Losing Control
This lesson explores the specific sensations of panic, dizziness, a racing heart, a sense of unreality, and trembling, and explains why together they create the particularly distressing feeling of losing control. It clarifies that this feeling is an interpretation rather than an accurate prediction, addresses the common fear of fainting or losing control entirely, and offers two practical tools for the moment this fear arises: naming the feeling clearly, and recalling the real track record of previous episodes that did not end in the feared outcome.
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Lesson 3
The Physiological Sigh
This lesson teaches the physiological sigh, a breathing technique involving a double inhale followed by a long, slow exhale, shown in research to reduce anxiety quickly and effectively. It explains the physical mechanism behind why this specific pattern works, guides listeners through three full cycles together, and offers practical guidance on frequency, discretion, and the value of practising the technique regularly rather than only reaching for it during acute panic.
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Lesson 4
Grounding Techniques For The Moment Panic Begins
This lesson teaches three grounding techniques for the moment panic begins: the five senses method, physical anchoring, and a counting or categorising task for racing thoughts. It explains why redirecting attention to the present, sensory moment interrupts the catastrophic thinking that fuels panic, and offers practical guidance on which technique tends to suit which kind of moment, encouraging listeners to switch techniques rather than persist with one that is not helping.
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Lesson 5
The Fear Of Fear
This lesson explores the fear of having another panic attack, often more disruptive than the attacks themselves. It explains the self-sustaining loop between heightened sensitivity to bodily sensations and increased likelihood of triggering panic, and introduces safety behaviours, the small habits that feel protective but quietly reinforce the underlying fear. Listeners are given three practical tools: distinguishing ordinary sensation from genuine escalation, gradually reducing safety behaviours, and naming the fear of fear directly when it arises.
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Lesson 6
How Avoidance Quietly Takes Over
This lesson explains how avoidance develops after panic, why it brings genuine short-term relief that makes it easy to slip into, and how it tends to spread and accumulate over time, often becoming more disruptive than the original panic attacks. It helps listeners notice the subtler, less obvious forms avoidance can take, and offers a clear, judgement-free way of identifying their own pattern, preparing the ground for the gradual return to avoided situations covered in the next lesson.
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Lesson 7
Gently Returning To What You Have Been Avoiding
This lesson offers a paced, practical approach to returning to avoided situations, drawing on graded exposure principles without clinical language. It explains why building a ladder of small, manageable steps works better than forcing the most difficult version of a situation all at once, and shows how to combine breathing and grounding tools from earlier lessons with each attempt. Listeners are encouraged to measure success by completing the planned step, not by the absence of anxiety while doing it.
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Lesson 8
Working With The Thoughts That Panic Creates
This lesson identifies the catastrophic, certainty-driven shape of the thoughts panic creates and teaches a structured three-question process for working with them: naming the thought precisely, weighing the evidence for and against it, and constructing a more balanced, realistic alternative. Two common panic thoughts are worked through in full as examples. Listeners leave with a repeatable process they can prepare in advance and use whenever a panic-related thought arises.
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Lesson 9
Building Your Panic Response Plan
This lesson guides listeners through building a personal, written panic response plan that brings together everything covered in the course. It has five parts: a description of their own pattern, an immediate in-the-moment toolkit, a thought-questioning toolkit, an avoidance ladder if relevant, and a calm, self-written note for moments of difficulty. Listeners are encouraged to write the plan immediately after the lesson while the content is fresh, and to keep it somewhere genuinely accessible.
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Lesson 10
Reducing How Often Panic Happens
The final lesson of the course takes the longer view, exploring everyday factors that influence how often panic occurs, including sleep, caffeine, ongoing stress, and regular movement. It offers an honest, realistic picture of what genuine progress with panic actually looks like over time, addresses how to respond to a difficult day without losing confidence in the progress already made, and closes with a warm, final reflection on the distance travelled across the course.
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