Anxiety & Support

What to Text Someone Having a Panic Attack

D
Devin

It's terrifying to sit up at night knowing your friend is spiraling on the other end of the phone, and feeling completely powerless to stop it. When anxiety spirals into a full-blown panic attack, the brain's logic centers shut down entirely. The fight-or-flight response takes the wheel.

In these moments, "Let me know what you need" or "Try to calm down" are the worst things to send. They require the panicked brain to do work (figuring out what they need) or invalidate what the brain is feeling.

Instead, your texts need to do two things: Ground them in reality, and remove all decisions.

5 Texts to Ground a Spiraling Friend

1. The "No Pressure" Anchor

When someone is panicking, they often feel guilty for bothering you or not replying fast enough. Remove that pressure immediately.

"I'm right here. You don't have to text me back. Just read my messages and know I'm not going to leave my phone."

2. The Physiological Reset

Grounding exercises pull the brain back into the physical body. Gently guide them through one over text.

Don't just read it. Send it.

Send an anonymous, beautifully designed digital affirmation card straight to their phone.

"Can you do me a favor? Look around the room right now and text me the names of three things that are colored blue."

3. The Biological Reminder

During a panic attack, the body literally feels like it is dying. The brain needs a clinical reminder that this is a temporary chemical storm.

"Your body is dumping adrenaline right now to protect you, but there is no danger. This is a chemical reaction. It feels terrifying, but it will pass in a few minutes."

4. The Directed Question

Open-ended questions ("What do you need?") cause paralysis. Yes-or-no questions are much easier for a panicked brain to process.

"Do you want me to keep texting you distraction stories, or do you want me to come pick you up? A or B."

5. The Pure Love Anchor

Sometimes they just need to know the walls aren't caving in.

"Take a slow breath. I love you, you are completely safe, and everything is going to be okay."

Send a visual anchor.

Sometimes reading a plain text message isn't enough. Send an anonymous, beautifully designed affirmation card they can lock onto.

Send a Free Card Now ✨

What *Not* to Text

Be the steady ground while their world is spinning. They will remember your calm long after the panic fades.

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Comfort Tool Weighted Blanket (15 lbs)

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