(Exploring Your Mind) Having a first panic attack is terrifying, so much so that many people believe they’re having a heart attack. What scares then the most about that first experience is the fear of the unknown. Thus, what happens next is a persistent fear that it could happen again.
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by Staff Writer, September 27th, 2019
What happens after the first panic attack opens a before and after in the life of any person. It’s a frightening experience that seems to come out of nowhere and manifests with a wide range of physical symptoms. It’s so painful that you’ll feel you’re about to die; that your heart will collapse at any moment.
Those who’ve never had a panic attack may have many biased ideas about this condition. Thus, it’s common to think it only affects weak, insecure people. Moreover, it’s also common to assume that attacks arise in very specific situations where one is highly anxious, such as an upcoming public performance or getting into an elevator or an airplane, etc.
Now, something everyone should understand about panic attacks is that they can arise at any time and without a specific trigger. Some people wake up in the middle of the night wrapped in a sense of alarming panic, firmly believing they’re about to have a heart attack. Others feel it for the first time while talking on the phone, having dinner with friends, or being at a grocery store.
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There’s also another important side of it you must understand. Anyone can have a panic attack at any given time. Because, regardless of whether we believe it or not, these experiences have nothing to do with personality, age, or circumstances; only anxiety. This feeling is normal in human beings. Therefore, you should know what happens and what to do if/when you get your first panic attack.
“Our anxiety doesn’t come from thinking about the future, but from wanting to control it.”
-Kahlil Gibran-
What happens after the first panic attack?

There are many techniques and resources within your reach to deal with anxiety. However, there’s one thing that often fails to get to you: information. You don’t recognize the symptoms and signs that anxiety leaves in your body and in your mind. You don’t know the consequences and the way they’ll manifest when they get to be too much.
For those reasons, many people don’t really know what a first panic attack is like. Somehow, in your biased ideology, it’s something that only happens to others or experiences you’ve seen on TV. You’ve seen how easily they solve it by breathing in a paper bag. It’s, therefore, necessary to have more reliable information and a certain culture of psychological disorders to be able to intervene as soon as possible.
Let’s look at what happens after the first panic attack.
Going to the emergency room
When you have a panic attack for the first time, your fear grows exponentially because you don’t understand what’s happening. Thus, ignorance and uncertainty both trigger your anxiety. There’s tachycardia, shortness of breath, dizziness, muscle tension, etc. Thus, it’s common for people to go to the emergency room because they believe you’re having a heart attack.
You’d be even more baffled after receiving a doctor’s diagnosis. That is, they tell you that what you just had was in your mind. So, of course, you feel disturbed and in denial. This is because the experience you just had is so real and physical that most people won’t hesitate to ask for a second opinion and to have further tests and checkups. On average, a doctor will prescribe anxiolytics for a limited time.
The cycle of fear begins after the first panic attack

Panic attacks are the product of development, even though they begin to manifest abruptly. They’re the physical trigger of an adverse emotional state that’s maintained over time. Thus, and on average, those who experience them have accumulated a great burden of anxiety over many months, perhaps years.
What happens after the first panic attack is secondary anxiety. This is the state in which you’ll develop an intense fear of having a new attack again. The intense symptoms and loss of control terrify you. It all means that you’ll end up feeding that fear, which will lead to a vicious cycle that intensifies this proclivity even more.
Helplessness and the journey for help
Seeking help is another side of what happens after the first panic attack. There comes a time when you’re aware of your helplessness. Sooner or later you realize that you’re losing control of your life. So, the thought of experiencing a new one in an unexpected place and circumstance leads you to take the first step in dealing with it.
However, you may not always deal with it properly. For instance, some people do yoga because they think that relaxation and meditation techniques will help them reduce these attacks. However, such techniques don’t always work. In fact, they don’t because anxiety is a complex and elusive enemy that’s long attached to their life. Hence, these people need more specialized concrete strategies like the ones only a therapist can offer.
Psychological therapy is the only means to reduce panic attacks and the emotional reality behind them. Stay hopeful because you’ll regain control to shape a fuller and more satisfying life, gradually and with commitment.
(Stillness in the Storm Editor) The suggestions above that only a trained therapist can help one with chronic anxiety may not be entirely accurate. Much of anxiety stems from our disempowering life habits, such as avoiding exercise, avoiding facing our fears, and avoiding pursuing life’s challenges and passions that make joy possible for us, to name a few. That said, we should seek help when we aren’t managing things effectively. This help can come in many forms, not just a trained professional.
– Justin
Stillness in the Storm Editor: Why did we post this?
Psychology is the study of the nature of mind. Philosophy is the use of that mind in life. Both are critically important to gain an understanding of as they are aspects of the self. All you do and experience will pass through these gateways of being. The preceding information provides an overview of this self-knowledge, offering points to consider that people often don’t take the time to contemplate. With the choice to gain self-awareness, one can begin to see how their being works. With the wisdom of self-awareness, one has the tools to master their being and life in general, bringing order to chaos through navigating the challenges with the capacity for right action.
– Justin
Not sure how to make sense of this? Want to learn how to discern like a pro? Read this essential guide to discernment, analysis of claims, and understanding the truth in a world of deception: 4 Key Steps of Discernment – Advanced Truth-Seeking Tools.
Stillness in the Storm Editor’s note: Did you find a spelling error or grammar mistake? Send an email to corrections@stillnessinthestorm.com, with the error and suggested correction, along with the headline and url. Do you think this article needs an update? Or do you just have some feedback? Send us an email at sitsshow@gmail.com. Thank you for reading.
Source:
https://exploringyourmind.com/the-first-panic-attack-and-what-happens-next/
“Psychological therapy is the only means to reduce panic attacks and the emotional reality behind them.”
Let me be straight here, psychology can do nothing to really treat panic attacks. Talk therapy can make you feel better for a short time and that’s all, but during a panic attack… you can figure for yourself, it’s zero. To be able to effectively treat anxiety, fear and its pick, panic attacks, one has to be able to reach and treat the emotional and mental levels which are both vibrational in nature. And that can be done only with special vibrational remedies.
And if you developed and tested those vibrational remedies is only the beginning. One has to track down the real source, those traumatic events which might happened during adult life or childhood. Even more/deeper, children with parents that suffer from panic attacks, sooner or later they experience that too. And how you treat that, the inherited predisposition for panic attacks.