Panic Surfing
How do you ride out a panic attack instead of fighting it?
Panic surfing is the practice of allowing panic to peak and pass without fighting it, fleeing the situation, or using safety behaviors — based on the understanding that panic attacks are physiologically self-limiting and cannot escalate indefinitely. The approach is drawn from panic treatment research and from acceptance-based models; it is one of the most effective behavioral components of modern panic disorder treatment.
The worst thing you can do during a panic attack is fight it. Struggling against the sensations — trying to force calm, escape the situation, convince yourself nothing is wrong — amplifies the arousal loop and teaches the nervous system that panic is an emergency requiring intervention. Panic surfing works with the physiology instead: the panic wave has a natural arc, it always peaks, and it always subsides. Your job is not to control it but to let it run its course while maintaining behavior. These practices are the clinical tools that operationalize that principle.
Practices
- Know the panic arc before the next attack
- Allow the sensations instead of fighting them
- Stay in the situation for the full arc
- Use somatic tracking instead of distraction
- Surf the escape urge without acting on it
- Conduct a post-panic review to counter catastrophic memory
Know the panic arc before the next attack
A panic attack peaks within 10 minutes and always subsides — not because you controlled it, but because the physiology is time-limited.
Allow the sensations instead of fighting them
Do not try to stop the racing heart, the dizziness, the breathlessness — allow them and observe.
Stay in the situation for the full arc
Leave only after the attack has peaked and begun to subside — not in the middle, no matter how strong the urge.
Use somatic tracking instead of distraction
Observe sensations with neutral curiosity rather than distracting from them — the curiosity interrupts the threat appraisal.
Surf the escape urge without acting on it
Treat the urge to flee as a wave — it rises, peaks, and falls without requiring your action.
Conduct a post-panic review to counter catastrophic memory
After every attack, record what actually happened — because anxiety memory is biased toward danger.
Practice this with IX Coach
Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.
IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).