Anxiety, Panic & Overwhelm Crisis Support – Worldwide
This page is a gentle starting point for people experiencing panic, intense anxiety, spiralling thoughts, sensory or emotional overwhelm, shutdown, fear, or feeling unable to cope.
Panic and overwhelm can feel frightening in the body and mind. You do not need to explain everything perfectly to ask for help. You can simply say, type, or show: “I feel overwhelmed and I need support.”
If you are in immediate danger
If you may harm yourself, someone else, feel unable to stay safe, or your symptoms feel medically dangerous, contact emergency services now or go to the nearest emergency department.
- New Zealand: 111
- Australia: 000
- United States / Canada: 911 or 988 where available
- UK / Europe: 999, 112, or your local emergency number
Gentle content notice
This page talks about anxiety, panic attacks, overwhelm, emotional crisis, body sensations, safety, and urgent support. If reading feels too much, pause, breathe slowly if you can, and reach out to a safe person or crisis service.
Panic can feel intense
Panic can feel like racing thoughts, chest tightness, shaking, dizziness, nausea, breathlessness, fear, crying, freezing, or feeling like something terrible is happening. If you are unsure whether symptoms are medical, seek urgent medical help.
You do not have to speak clearly
If words are hard, you can point, type, use AAC, send a saved message, or ask someone trusted to contact support with you.
Quick calming steps for right now
Choose one small step. You do not need to do everything.
Lower the pressure
Move somewhere quieter if you can. Sit down, loosen tight clothing, lower bright lights, reduce noise, or step away from the situation.
Use one sentence
“I am having panic or overwhelm and I need help calming down.”
Reach one support pathway
Contact a trusted person, crisis line, text/chat service, doctor, local crisis team, or emergency service if you feel unsafe.
Simple grounding option
- Place both feet on the floor if you can.
- Name five things you can see.
- Press your hands together or hold a safe object.
- Take one slower breath out.
- Say: “This is intense, but I am getting support.”
What panic, anxiety, or overwhelm can feel like
Panic and overwhelm can show up differently for different people, especially for neurodivergent people, trauma survivors, children, teens, carers, and people already under stress.
Body signs
- Fast heartbeat or chest tightness
- Shaking, sweating, nausea, or dizziness
- Breathlessness or feeling trapped
- Muscle tension or exhaustion
Mind signs
- Racing thoughts or spiralling worry
- Fear that something bad will happen
- Feeling detached, unreal, or frozen
- Difficulty making decisions or explaining needs
Behaviour signs
- Needing to escape or hide
- Crying, shutdown, meltdown, or silence
- Repeated reassurance seeking
- Avoiding people, tasks, places, or calls
If this is happening to you
If you are panicking, overwhelmed, or feeling unable to cope, the goal is not to “fix everything” right now. The goal is to reduce danger, lower pressure, and connect with support.
Try this first
- Move away from immediate danger or pressure.
- Sit or lie somewhere safe if you feel dizzy.
- Text one person: “Can you stay with me?”
- Use text/chat support if phone calls feel impossible.
Copy-and-send message
“I’m feeling panicked and overwhelmed. I don’t feel okay right now. Can you stay with me or help me contact support?”
If you are helping someone through panic or overwhelm
Stay calm, reduce pressure, and avoid forcing too many words or decisions at once.
What can help
- Use a soft, steady voice.
- Offer simple choices: “sit here or outside?”
- Reduce noise, lights, crowds, and questions.
- Stay nearby if they want support.
What to avoid
- Do not say “calm down” as a command.
- Do not crowd, grab, shame, or rush them.
- Do not force eye contact or explanations.
- Do not assume silence means they are ignoring you.
Helpful phrase
“You are not in trouble. We can slow this down. I can stay with you while we get support.”
Accessible support options
When panic or overwhelm makes speaking hard, support should still be reachable.
Text or chat support
Text, webchat, and messaging can be easier when talking feels too hard.
Open text/chat supportCommunication access
Use AAC, writing, typing, support people, yes/no answers, or extra processing time.
Open communication accessNeurodivergent crisis support
Overwhelm, shutdown, masking, burnout, and sensory overload may need low-demand support.
Open ND crisis supportWorldwide anxiety, panic & overwhelm contacts
Contact options change over time, so always check the official service page where possible. If there is immediate danger, use your local emergency number first.
New Zealand / Aotearoa
- Emergency: 111
- 1737: free call or text 1737 any time for support from a trained counsellor
- Anxiety NZ: 0800 ANXIETY / 0800 269 438
- Lifeline NZ: 0800 543 354 or free text 4357
Australia
- Emergency: 000
- Lifeline Australia: 13 11 14
- Lifeline text: 0477 13 11 14
- Beyond Blue: 1300 22 4636
United States
- Emergency: 911
- 988 Lifeline: call, text, chat, and Deaf/HoH access options
- If symptoms feel medical: seek urgent medical care
Canada
- Emergency: 911
- 9-8-8 Canada: call or text 9-8-8 for suicide crisis support
- If you need local help: use provincial or territorial crisis pathways
United Kingdom
- Emergency: 999 or 112
- Samaritans: 116 123, free any time
- NHS urgent mental health: use NHS 111 or local urgent mental health services where available
Ireland
- Emergency: 112 or 999
- Samaritans: 116 123
- Local support: use local crisis, GP/doctor, or urgent mental health pathways
Europe
- Emergency: 112 in many European countries
- Local crisis support: use country-specific mental health, suicide prevention, or urgent care pathways
- Language access: ask for interpreter or translated support where available
International / worldwide
- Find a Helpline: search by country and topic, including anxiety, depression, domestic violence, sexual abuse, suicide prevention, and more
- Local emergency number: use immediately if you are unsafe or symptoms feel medically dangerous
If you are unsure what to use
Choose the most urgent safe option: emergency services for immediate danger, medical help for worrying physical symptoms, or a crisis/text/chat support service if you need emotional support now.
Where to go next
These pages can help connect you to the wider crisis support structure.
Crisis Support by Topic
Return to the main topic doorway for different types of crisis support.
Open topic supportSuicide & Self-Harm Crisis Support
For suicidal thoughts, self-harm urges, or feeling unable to stay safe.
Open suicide/self-harm supportDepression & Low Mood
For hopelessness, numbness, low mood, not coping, or urgent emotional support.
Open depression supportTrauma, PTSD & Flashbacks
For trauma responses, flashbacks, dissociation, panic, or feeling unsafe after triggers.
Open trauma supportText & Chat Crisis Support
For lower-pressure non-phone crisis support options.
Open text/chat supportCrisis Support by Location
Find emergency and crisis support by country or region.
Open location supportIf panic or overwhelm is making everything feel too much, choose one tiny next step: move somewhere safer, contact one person, or use one crisis support option.