biker, I went through a time when panic attacks happened regularly for me. One particularly bad time was when I was on a bus, coming from the shops. I'd bought too much to carry comfortably, and the bus was really busy. The windows were steamed up and I couldn't see out very well. I actually felt as if I couldn't remember how to breathe. I knew I was hyperventilating, with my heart going like the clappers, but didn't know what to do. It was terrible. At that time, I was still working, things weren't easy at home (resolved now), and I felt as if I was going to 'blow'. I went to my GP who was very, very good. I was referred to a counsellor, who I saw over a number of weeks. My GP told me what I felt. He said, "You feel as if you're going to die, when this happens, but you're not. It's ok. Your body is just doing what it should do when you don't breathe properly." The counselling sessions helped me so much, and she gave me breathing exercises which I tried to follow when I got panicky. It didn't always work, but I found that the attacks got better, as I dealt with my problems. (The paper bag the doctor told your daughter to carry would help in that if she breathed into it when she was panicking, she would then breathe in carbon-dioxide, which would help to calm her breathing again). I hope she'll be able to deal with all this, and I'm sure she will with the right support. I found I could bring on an attack just by thinking about it, and that was where the breathing exercises helped me.