An Exposure and Response Prevention technique that helps individuals safely face and overcome the fear of physical sensations linked to anxiety or panic.
A snapshot of who this therapy is for and how it works
Panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, healthy anxiety, OCD with body-focused triggers
Individual or group · In person or virtual with guided practice
Weekly or twice weekly
Typically 8–16 sessions, often as part of a structured ERP program
In Vivo Exposure, CBT, ACT, mindfulness practices, medication management
Well-supported by research for panic disorder and anxiety conditions
Interoceptive Exposure is a specialized form of Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) designed to reduce fear of bodily sensations that often trigger panic or anxiety. Instead of avoiding sensations such as a racing heart, dizziness, or shortness of breath, clients intentionally recreate them in a safe, structured environment.
Spinning in a chair to induce dizziness
Running in place to increase heart rate
Holding the breath briefly to mimic breathlessness
Breathing through a straw to create air hunger
Learning to trust your body again through gradual exposure
Teaches the body not to overreact to normal physical sensations
Helps individuals stop limiting their lives out of fear of symptoms
Helping individuals safely confront and retrain fear responses
Restores freedom to exercise, socialize, travel, and engage fully in life
Therapists guide clients through a structured process that teaches the body and mind to respond differently to fear-based sensations.
Clients learn how the nervous system triggers symptoms and why avoidance intensifies them.
Therapists and clients collaborate to pinpoint the sensations that trigger panic or worry.
Together, they design safe exercises that intentionally bring on sensations like dizziness, breathlessness, warmth, or heart pounding.
Clients experience the sensations while resisting avoidance, escape behaviors, or “safety rituals.” Over time, fear decreases naturally.
Clients repeat exposure exercises between sessions to reinforce learning and maintain progress.
Interoceptive Exposure is ideal for people whose fear centers around internal bodily experiences. It helps reduce panic cycles, restore daily functioning, and build confidence in facing uncomfortable sensations.
Support for reducing fear of sensations such as heart racing or dizziness
Tools for tolerating and understanding normal bodily fluctuations
Support for obsessions tied to bodily sensations or “contamination” feelings
Interoceptive work helps individuals reclaim freedom in daily life.
Therapy helps individuals remain steady in the face of internal stress cues.
A safe, guided approach to reconnecting with physical sensations
TruPaths highlights this therapy because it is one of the most effective and most overlooked treatments for panic disorder and body-focused anxiety. By directly facing physical sensations rather than fearing them, clients regain confidence, freedom, and trust in their bodies.
Your body is not the enemy. Interoceptive Exposure helps individuals face physical sensations with courage, reducing fear and restoring confidence.
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