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Lesson 123: Self-soothing strategies during an attack

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Lesson 123: Self-soothing strategies during an attack

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Duration:70 minutes

Topic Introduction:When panic sets in, you need a self-soothing routine that can be followed in any situation. This lesson provides a four-step process: lengthening the exhale, landing on your feet, slightly relaxing your shoulders and neck, and repeating a safety phrase. When practicing, keep your goals small and focus on completing just one gentle movement. You don't need to change yourself immediately; you just need to understand one more reaction. Each record is the beginning of rebuilding stability. When practicing, keep your goals small and focus on completing just one gentle movement. You don't need to change yourself immediately; you just need to understand one more reaction.

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Lesson 123: Self-soothing strategies during an attack

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This lesson focuses on "self-soothing strategies during a panic attack." We're not practicing fighting panic, but rather establishing repeatable steps when the panic spikes, so that the body, brain, and behavior know what to do next. When panic has already begun, you need a routine that doesn't rely on external aids and can be followed in any situation. This lesson practices lengthening exhalations, landing on your feet, slightly relaxing your shoulders and neck, and repeating safety phrases. The most difficult part of a panic attack is that it comes on quickly, and the physical sensations are very real. A rapid heartbeat, chest tightness, dizziness, numbness in the hands, difficulty breathing, and nausea can all immediately make you think of the worst possible outcome. Remember, intense discomfort is not the same as a real disaster; often, it's a warning sign from the body in a state of high arousal. The first step in this lesson is to change the interpretation of the disaster into a physical description. You can rewrite "I'm going to die" as "My heart is racing"; "I'm going to lose control" as "I'm currently in a state of high arousal"; "I can't hold on" as "I need to slow down for a minute." This change in language isn't about comforting yourself, but about giving your nervous system new instructions. The second step is to return to actionable steps. Place your feet firmly on the ground, slowly lengthen your exhale, relax your shoulders and neck, observe three real objects around you, and repeat a reassurance phrase: "This is the peak of panic, I am experiencing it, it will subside." Don't rush to banish the feeling; simply accompany your body through this phase within manageable limits. The third step is post-event reflection, not judgment. Write down what happened before the episode, the highest point your body reached, how long it lasted, what you did, and whether the worst outcome actually occurred. This record helps the brain update its risk assessment, making the next panic less unfamiliar than the first. If you experience persistent chest pain, risk of fainting, severe difficulty breathing, strong suicidal thoughts, or symptoms significantly different from before, seek immediate medical help. The exercises in this course are suitable for psychoeducation and self-regulation, but cannot replace a doctor's diagnosis. Finally, give yourself a reassuring reminder: "The panic is intense, but it's the peak, not the end. I can slowly rebuild my sense of security through breathing, landing, verbal communication, and reflection." Today, recognizing even one signal, performing a reassuring action, or minimizing self-blame is already a step towards regaining control. After reading aloud, please write down one on-site calming action, one safety phrase, and one post-event reflection question. When the next seizure occurs, you don't need to perfectly execute all the techniques; just do the simplest step first. What you are learning is not to never have an attack again, but to no longer be completely overwhelmed by it when it does occur. Every time you safely navigate an attack, it becomes evidence you can recall for the next one.

2. Image from the AI-powered Psychological Q&A section

AI Healing Q&A

To develop self-soothing strategies for sudden episodes, you can tell the AI the episode scenario, your physical sensations, catastrophic thoughts, and your most feared outcome. We first distinguish between facts, interpretations, and fears, then find an actionable on-the-spot soothing or debriefing step. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle action. You don't need to change yourself immediately; you just need to understand one more reaction. Each recording is the beginning of rebuilding stability. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle action.

2. Images from the Music Therapy section

○ Music therapy guidance

After learning self-soothing strategies for sudden attacks, it's recommended to choose slow, low-stimulation music with a clear sense of repetition to allow your heart rate and breathing to gradually calm down. When listening, don't analyze the melody; simply observe whether your shoulders, neck, chest, and abdomen begin to relax. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle movement. You don't need to change yourself immediately; just try to understand your reaction better. Each recording is the beginning of rebuilding stability. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle movement.

🎵 Lesson 123: Audio Playback  
Slow down the pace and your heart will relax.
3. Images from the Tea Drinks Healing section

○Eastern and Western Healing Teas

This lesson suggests choosing a mild, low-stimulation hot beverage to help stabilize your body's rhythm after learning self-soothing strategies for sudden outbursts. You can use light black tea, osmanthus oolong, chamomile tea, or sip warm water slowly in small amounts. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle movement. You don't need to change yourself immediately; just understand one more reaction. Each record is the beginning of rebuilding stability. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle movement.

○ Healing Recipes

Aconite and Cinnamon Porridge

 

Aconite and Cinnamon Porridge is suitable as a healing recipe after this lesson. It is designed to be gentle, stable, and low-burden, replenishing the body's energy after learning self-soothing strategies for panic attacks, and reducing the amplification of the panic experience by hunger, fatigue, and tension. Aconite-containing ingredients should be used only under the guidance of a qualified medical professional or Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner; self-medication is not recommended. Eat slowly, observing your heart rate, breathing, hunger, satisfaction, and sense of stabilization. It does not aim for elaborate presentation but rather serves as a gentle replenishment after panic regulation exercises.

Stable energy, low burden, gentle support
5. Images in the Mandala section

○Mandala Healing

After completing self-soothing strategies for sudden episodes, quietly observe the mandala image. Don't rush to analyze the colors and shapes; simply let your gaze move between the center, edges, and repetitive rhythms to help your nervous system return from high arousal to order. During practice, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle movement. You don't need to change yourself immediately; simply try to understand one more reaction. Each record is the beginning of rebuilding stability. During practice, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle movement.

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○ Calligraphy and engraving therapy practice

This lesson's writing exercises focus on self-soothing strategies during a sudden attack. Choose a word, such as safe, breathe, stay, come back, or bearable, and write it repeatedly with slow strokes, allowing the hand rhythm to lead the body in a slowing motion. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle action. You don't need to change yourself immediately; simply try to understand one more reaction. Each time you write, it's the beginning of rebuilding a sense of stability. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle action.

7. Images from the Art Therapy section

○ Art Therapy Guidance

Drawing exercises can help you visualize the peaks of panic, physical sensations, or catastrophic images from your self-soothing strategies during a sudden attack as lines, blocks of color, and spatial distance. Don't try to make it realistic; simply externalize the fear from your body onto the paper. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle action. You don't need to change yourself immediately; just try to understand one more reaction. Each record is the beginning of rebuilding stability. When practicing, keep your goals small, completing only one gentle action.

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○ Diary Healing Suggestions

For the journaling exercise, please write down three points related to self-soothing strategies during a sudden episode: the most obvious physical signal today, the strongest catastrophic thought, and one soothing action you're willing to try. Journaling is not about self-criticism, but about building observation skills. When practicing, keep your goals small and focus on completing just one gentle action. You don't need to change yourself immediately; you just need to understand one more reaction. Each entry is the beginning of rebuilding stability. When practicing, keep your goals small and focus on completing just one gentle action.

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After completing the self-soothing strategies for a sudden attack, remind yourself: I can use exhalation, landing, relaxation, and safety words to help me get through the peak.