Panic attacks rarely come out of nowhere. Even when they feel sudden, there is a web of learned associations beneath the surface. A tightness in the chest reminds the body of a previous scare, a crowded subway echoes the night you almost fainted, a subtle odor recalls a hospital waiting room. Panic builds as the mind tries to escape or control the sensations, and the nervous system races ahead. By the time the episode peaks, logic is drowned out by adrenaline.

EMDR therapy offers a way to interrupt that cycle by changing how the brain stores and links threat memories and body cues. Originally developed within the world of PTSD therapy, EMDR has since been adapted for anxiety, phobias, and notably for panic disorder with or without agoraphobia. For many clients, it complements or, at times, outperforms standard exposure approaches because it addresses the origins of the fear network, not only the behaviors surrounding it.

This is not about forcing yourself to “think positive” while white-knuckling through sensations. It is about allowing the nervous system to fully process the original alarms so that current triggers no longer hijack you.

How panic becomes a loop

Most people describe three layers to their panic:

    An initial cue: a physical sensation like heart flutter, a specific location, or a thought about being far from help. A fast evaluation: “I am having a heart attack,” “I will faint and embarrass myself,” “I am trapped.” An escalation of body signals: rising heart rate, dizziness, numbness, breath changes, and a strong urge to escape or seek safety.

Over time, the loop tightens. Anticipatory anxiety grows. People begin to avoid elevators, highways, meetings, flights, or exercise. Partners and family unintentionally feed the loop by rescuing or accommodating. The map of safe places shrinks. When a person finally seeks help, they may have years of learned fear built around split seconds of sensation.

If we only target the behaviors, we can make some headway. Exposure works. But if the memory network that powers the fear remains intact, the panic can return during stress, illness, or major life changes. EMDR therapy is designed to reach and reprocess that network.

What EMDR is, and why it helps panic

EMDR stands for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. In practice, clients recall components of disturbing memories or sensations while receiving bilateral stimulation. That can look like tracking the therapist’s fingers left to right, listening to alternating tones, or feeling gentle taps. The goal is not distraction. The bilateral rhythm engages innate information processing so that memories, body states, and beliefs integrate instead of staying stuck in “unfinished business.”

In trauma therapy and PTSD therapy, we use EMDR to process accidents, assaults, war memories, or losses. With panic work, the targets are often smaller but numerous. We focus on:

    The first big panic episode, and any near misses that felt like danger. Embarrassing or helpless moments during public symptoms. Critical early experiences with sickness, fainting, or caregivers who reacted fearfully. “Feeder memories,” such as being scolded for crying or seeing a parent panic. Present-day triggers like a crowded bus or a quickened heartbeat.

One reason EMDR therapy fits panic is that it treats interoceptive cues, not only external events. If your system learned that a skipped heartbeat equals catastrophe, we can target the body cue itself as if it were a memory. That keeps treatment from getting stuck at the level of logic. You already know that a panic attack is not a heart attack. Your body has not caught up.

A quick vignette from practice

A client, let’s call her Maya, had panic attacks while driving on elevated highways. She had never crashed. The first event happened two days after she got distressing medical news about her dad. She felt a wave of heat, her hands tingled, and she pulled to the shoulder shaking. For the next year she took side roads, left early, and asked her partner to switch routes. She tried breathing apps, and they helped sometimes, but any thought of a flyover ramp set off alarms.

In EMDR, we mapped her panic network. A moment from age 9 surfaced, riding in the backseat while her mother hyperventilated on a bridge. We targeted that with bilateral stimulation. The associated belief “I am not safe unless someone else is in control” shifted to “I can keep myself steady.” We also targeted the sensation of tingling hands, using short, imaginal interoceptive exposures combined with EMDR sets. Three weeks later, she merged onto the highway and noticed her heart jump. Instead of spiraling, her body stayed with the sensation, and it passed. She was surprised, not triumphant. The fear had lost credibility.

The EMDR roadmap, adapted for panic

EMDR follows an eight-phase framework. Clinicians adjust each step for panic patterns, but the spine remains consistent.

History taking and case formulation. We listen for the chain that connects first episodes, medical scares, family modeling, and current life stress. Panic often overlaps with perfectionism, health anxiety, and sensitivity to body sensations. We also rule out cardiac, thyroid, and other medical conditions, and screen for sleep apnea and medication side effects. If you have frequent substance use or benzodiazepine dependence, we plan around that.

Preparation and resourcing. Before any memory work, we build stabilization. This is not optional. Many clients with panic fear sensations so strongly that even mild activation feels like danger. We teach brief grounding drills, paced breathing that does not trigger hypocapnia, and a few sensory anchors. The therapist will demonstrate the bilateral equipment or hand movements so nothing feels mysterious. If dissociation or complex trauma is present, we may lengthen this phase.

Assessment and target selection. We identify a picture or body cue to hold in mind, along with the worst moment, the negative belief it carries, and a desired belief. For panic work, clients often choose “I am going to die” paired with “I am safe now,” or “I cannot cope” paired with “I can handle this.” We measure distress using SUD, a 0 to 10 rating, and belief strength using VOC, often 1 to 7.

Desensitization. Bilateral sets typically last 20 to 60 seconds, repeated with brief check-ins. The therapist says “go with that,” and you notice what comes: images, feelings, body shifts, or memories. We do not force the content. If nothing happens, we switch stimulation formats or adjust the target. For panic, sensations like air hunger or chest tightness are central. The goal is not to breathe them away, but to metabolize what they represent.

Installation. As distress drops, we strengthen the desired belief. Clients often move from “I am not safe” to “I can ride the wave,” then to “My body knows how to settle.” We update the belief until it feels true while thinking of the original trigger.

Body scan. With eyes closed, you check for leftover tightness. Panic often hides as a throat catch or a band around the ribs. Any residue becomes the next mini target.

Closure. Each session ends at a manageable place. If we did not finish processing, we use containment imagery or grounding to bring arousal down. You leave with simple between-session practices, not heavy homework.

Reevaluation. At the next meeting, we check how triggers felt during the week. For panic clients, sleep and caffeine changes can shift responses, so we track those too.

How EMDR actually feels in the room

Clients ask whether EMDR feels strange. It is unusual, but not in a theatrical way. Your therapist explains each step. You agree on a hand signal to pause. When the bilateral stimulation starts, your attention naturally moves. Sometimes memories connect like beads on a string. Other times, progress shows up more subtly. People notice a spontaneous breath, a drop in forehead tension, or a new thought like “This is old.” The therapist does less talking than in traditional psychotherapy. The work is experiential and focused.

Session length varies. Standard is 50 to 60 minutes, but some clinics offer 80 to 120 minute intensives when panic is acute or travel is an issue. Many clients feel a shift within 3 to 6 sessions that include reprocessing, but full resolution of a complex panic network can take 10 to 20 sessions spread over two to three months. These are averages, not promises. Severity, coexisting depression, and external stress all matter.

When EMDR is likely a good fit

    Your panic started around a clear period of stress, loss, or medical scare. You notice fast, catastrophic interpretations of body sensations. Exposure exercises helped but the fear returns during life spikes. You have specific avoided situations, like bridges, flights, or elevators. You can tolerate brief activation with support, and you want more than coping skills.

Preparing for your first EMDR sessions

    Ask about your therapist’s EMDR training and experience with panic disorder. Reduce alcohol or THC before sessions so sensations are clear and processing stays engaged. Eat a light snack an hour ahead to avoid blood sugar dips that mimic anxiety. Plan 15 minutes after the appointment for a walk, water, or notes. Pick one or two personal grounding tools, like a textured object or a calming song.

How EMDR interacts with other treatments

CBT and exposure. These remain gold standards for panic. EMDR often slots in when exposure hits a ceiling or when traumatic memories or medical scares fuel the anxiety. The two modalities can be blended. For example, we process the memory of collapsing in a grocery store using EMDR, then do brief in vivo exposure to the store a week later. Clients typically need less exposure time once the memory network softens.

Mindfulness and somatic work. Interoceptive awareness is important. Body scans and gentle movement help build a friendlier relationship with sensations. During EMDR, those same skills allow you to notice shifts without forcing them.

Couples therapy. Panic affects the system around it. Partners often become safety signals or unwitting reinforcers. A few joint sessions can pay dividends. The partner learns not to over-reassure or rescue, and the client learns to ask for support that does not shrink their life. For example, instead of driving every time, the partner might ride along quietly while the client takes the wheel during an exposure. Coordination between EMDR and couples therapy keeps gains from unraveling at home.

Medication. Many clients come in on SSRIs or SNRIs. Those can reduce baseline arousal, making EMDR smoother. Benzodiazepines can blunt learning if used right before sessions, so clinicians often suggest timing doses later in the day if medically safe, in collaboration with the prescriber. Beta blockers can help with performance anxiety but are less helpful for spontaneous panic. None of this is one size fits all. Talk to both your therapist and prescriber.

Ketamine therapy. Some clinics now offer ketamine therapy for treatment-resistant depression and, less commonly, for severe anxiety. There is emerging interest in pairing ketamine with psychotherapy because the acute window can soften rigid patterns. For panic disorder, evidence is limited compared to PTSD and depression. If you consider ketamine, vet the clinic, ensure medical screening, and coordinate closely with your EMDR therapist. The risk is chasing novelty rather than consolidating skills and processing. The potential benefit is a short period of flexibility that makes reprocessing easier. Respect the trade-offs.

Safety and edge cases

Medical mimics. New-onset panic symptoms deserve a medical check, especially if you are over 40 or have cardiac risk factors. Thyroid dysfunction, arrhythmias, anemia, asthma, and reflux can present as anxiety. Treating those conditions changes the floor under your feet.

Complex trauma or dissociation. If you have a history of ongoing childhood adversity, neglect, or dissociation, you may need a slower pace. EMDR still works, but stabilization and parts-informed work come first. Pushing too fast can backfire by reinforcing avoidance.

OCD and health anxiety. Panic can overlap with obsessive fears and rituals, such as constant pulse checking or repeated medical Googling. EMDR can target the felt sense and specific feeder memories, but pure OCD often responds best to exposure and response prevention combined with carefully selected EMDR targets.

Psychosis, mania, or severe substance use. Active psychosis or uncontrolled bipolar mania are not appropriate for trauma processing. Stabilization is the priority. With substance use, wait for a period of sobriety so that memory systems are stable during processing.

Pregnancy. EMDR is nonpharmacologic and generally considered safe during pregnancy, but intensity should be titrated. Grounding and gentle pacing matter, especially when sleep is limited.

What to expect over the course of care

Clients often notice early wins in spaces they had abandoned. A former runner tolerates a faster heart rate without spiraling. A commuter stands on the train platform and feels alert but not doomed. Social plans get scheduled without negotiation around exits. The change is less about absence of sensations and more about lack of reactivity.

Relapses happen, usually after sleepless weeks, illness, or big transitions. We plan for that. EMDR includes a future template, where you rehearse encountering a trigger with your new responses in place. A brief booster session months later can refresh the gains. Some clients come in yearly for a tune-up during heavy seasons.

If you want numbers, be cautious. Panic severity, chronicity, and coexisting disorders vary. In a straightforward case that started after a health scare and lacks complex trauma, we might map the network in two sessions, process two to four targets over four to eight sessions, and complete two or three in vivo practices in the community. When childhood adversity entered the picture, I have worked with clients for six months at a steadier pace, then watched them reclaim air travel, public speaking, and exercise.

Working with the right therapist

Training matters. Look for EMDR therapists who have completed an EMDRIA-approved basic training. Ask how often they treat panic and how they adapt the standard protocol for interoceptive targets. Good questions include: How do you handle medical rule-outs? What is your plan if I get overwhelmed? How will we include my partner or support system without feeding avoidance? Can we coordinate with my psychiatrist or primary care doctor?

Telehealth can work well. Alternating tones or tapping can be done through apps or therapist-provided links. Some clients prefer in-person for the sense of containment. Follow your nervous system’s read on safety, convenience, and fit.

You should feel collaborative momentum within the first two or three meetings. If sessions feel confusing or uncontained, tell your therapist. The work should stretch you, not flood you.

A deeper, practical example

Dev, 31, worked in tech sales. His first panic attack came on a delayed flight. He felt lightheaded and bolted to the restroom. He avoided flying for two years, which hurt his career. He also started skipping workouts whenever his pulse sped up. During our history, we found three anchors. First, a childhood fainting episode during a flu. Second, a humiliating scene in high school when he vomited after sprints and classmates laughed. Third, the cramped air and stale smell of the jet cabin that mirrored the high school gym.

We resourced him with a brief orienting practice: feet to ground, eyes tracking three colors in the room, and a paced exhale that did not feel like forced breathing. We tested interoceptive cues by having him jog in place for 20 seconds, then process the heartbeat with short bilateral sets. He noticed a memory of his father joking, “Don’t be weak,” and a wave of embarrassment. That became a target. Over sessions, the negative belief “My body betrays me” shifted to “My body sends signals I can ride.”

We also targeted a two-second image from the flight, staring at the closed lavatory door and thinking, “I am trapped.” After processing, the cabin image lost its bite. He booked a short flight with a friend, learned to ask the flight attendant for a water without apologizing, and sat with early activation without catastrophizing it. Six months later, he was flying monthly. He still felt off on turbulence days, but he did not feed the loop. That is what “breaking the cycle” looks like: not perfection, but a nervous system that does not overlearn from blips.

Where couples therapy fits

Panic is contagious in a household. One partner’s face changes, and the other rushes to accommodate. Over time, that care can become a prison. A short course of couples therapy can reframe roles. The partner learns to offer presence and confidence instead of constant checking: “I am here, and I trust your body to handle this.” The client practices asking for the smallest useful support, like staying in the store together for five minutes, rather than asking to abandon the plan. EMDR work progresses faster when the home environment stops signaling danger.

Why EMDR does not just mask symptoms

Skeptics sometimes worry EMDR is a trick, a fancy way to distract you during exposure. In practice, the changes often outlast what we see from white-knuckled exposure, especially when panic is linked to old experiences of helplessness or shame. Once those are processed, the body cues lose their authority. You might still notice your heart, but it no longer arrives carrying a crate of old fears.

Clients often say, “I did not think about using my coping skills today.” That is the point. The system is less preoccupied. EMDR does include coping skills, but it aims at a deeper shift: from danger to context, from avoidance to choice.

Final thoughts from the chair

Panic convinces people that they are fragile. It lies in a convincing voice. The first goal in treatment is not to argue with that voice, but to give your body enough safe, guided experience that the voice grows quiet on its own. EMDR therapy offers a structure for that experience. It respects how your nervous system learned from real moments and shows it how to learn again.

If you are standing at the threshold, worried that EMDR will make you feel worse, ask for a paced start. Target a small piece, like the moment your hands tingle in the checkout line. See if https://privatebin.net/?584b4cfff0d894fd#hwXcgPMsoM3nWGJYyfNHpLsWuZnCGfbcEYhAo2FkXZi your system can process that while supported. Wins stack. The cycle loosens. Your map of the world expands, intersection by intersection, flight by flight, conversation by conversation. That is not theory. It is what happens when fear networks update and your life, not panic, starts setting the agenda.

Name: Canyon Passages

Address: 1800 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505

Phone: (505) 303-0137

Website: http://www.canyonpassages.com/

Email: info@canyonpassages.com

Hours:
Monday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Saturday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Sunday: Closed

Open-location code (plus code): M355+GV Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

Map/listing URL: https://maps.app.goo.gl/D347QstXHB1u3n4F8

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Canyon Passages provides depth-oriented psychotherapy in Santa Fe for individuals and couples seeking support beyond conventional talk therapy.

The practice specializes in EMDR therapy, trauma therapy, PTSD therapy, couples therapy, and psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy in a boutique private-practice setting.

Clients in Santa Fe can access in-person sessions, while online therapy helps extend care to people who need more flexibility or continuity.

The practice is designed for people who value privacy, individualized attention, and a thoughtful approach to healing and personal growth.

Canyon Passages serves Santa Fe and also notes service connections to Sedona, Pagosa Springs, and online clients seeking deeper therapeutic work.

People looking for EMDR psychotherapy in Santa Fe may find this practice relevant when they want trauma-informed care that is personalized rather than one-size-fits-all.

The website emphasizes a blend of clinical experience and holistic support for trauma recovery, relationship concerns, and meaningful life transitions.

To learn more or request a consultation, call (505) 303-0137 or visit http://www.canyonpassages.com/.

A public Google Maps listing is also available as a reference point for the Santa Fe location.

Popular Questions About Canyon Passages

What does Canyon Passages specialize in?

Canyon Passages specializes in EMDR therapy, trauma therapy, PTSD therapy, couples therapy, ketamine-assisted psychotherapy, and psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy.

Is Canyon Passages located in Santa Fe, NM?

Yes. The official website lists the Santa Fe office at 1800 Cll Medico suite a1 45, Santa Fe, NM 87507.

Does Canyon Passages offer EMDR therapy?

Yes. EMDR therapy is one of the core services highlighted on the official website.

Are online sessions available?

Yes. The website says Canyon Passages offers both in-person and online sessions.

Does Canyon Passages work with couples?

Yes. Couples therapy and therapy for shared trauma are both part of the services described on the site.

What kinds of concerns does the practice address?

The website focuses on trauma, PTSD, relationship challenges, shared trauma, and spiritual growth and integration, with a deeper emphasis on personalized transformation-oriented therapy.

Who might be a good fit for this practice?

The site describes the practice as a fit for individuals and couples seeking depth, privacy, individualized care, and trauma-informed work that goes beyond symptom management alone.

How can I contact Canyon Passages?

Phone: (505) 303-0137
Email: info@canyonpassages.com
Website: http://www.canyonpassages.com/

Landmarks Near Santa Fe, NM

St. Vincent Regional Medical Center is a well-known Santa Fe healthcare landmark and can help orient local visitors searching for nearby professional services. Visit http://www.canyonpassages.com/ for service information.

Cerrillos Road is one of Santa Fe’s main commercial corridors and a practical reference point for people navigating the area. Call (505) 303-0137 to learn more about therapy services.

Santa Fe Place area retail and business corridors are familiar to many residents and can help define the broader local service zone. The official website has the latest contact details.

Downtown Santa Fe is a major reference point for residents and visitors throughout the city, even for services located outside the historic core. Canyon Passages serves Santa Fe clients with in-person and online options.

The Railyard District is another recognizable Santa Fe destination that helps local users place the broader city context. Reach out through the website to request a consultation.

Meow Wolf Santa Fe is one of the city’s best-known venues and a useful landmark for people familiar with the area. More information is available at http://www.canyonpassages.com/.

Santa Fe Community College is a practical local reference point for residents in the southern part of the city. The practice may be relevant for adults and couples seeking trauma-informed psychotherapy.

Interstate 25 is a major access route for people traveling to or from Santa Fe and helps define the larger regional service area. Online sessions can also support clients who need more scheduling flexibility.

Christus St. Vincent and nearby medical and office corridors are familiar landmarks for many Santa Fe residents looking for professional support services. Use the site to review the practice approach and contact details.

The Southside Santa Fe area is an important local reference for residents who want a practical sense of where services are based. Canyon Passages offers a Santa Fe office along with online care options.