Agoraphobia is widely misunderstood as "fear of open spaces". It is not. Agoraphobia is the fear of being in a place where escape would be difficult or help unavailable if a panic attack occurred. For some sufferers, this means being unable to leave the house. For others, it means being unable to travel beyond a small radius, or being unable to use public transport, supermarkets, motorways or busy streets.
The condition is rooted in panic. After a sufficiently bad panic attack — or a series of them — the mind begins to map out which places "feel safe" and which do not. The safe map shrinks over time. What started as "I had a panic attack on the bus and now I avoid buses" can, within months, become "I cannot leave my street."
Why agoraphobia is fully recoverable
Because agoraphobia is fundamentally panic disorder with avoidance, resolving the underlying anxiety resolves the agoraphobia. The threat-response system that fires in feared places is the same system at work in any anxiety disorder, and it responds to the same physiological reset.
The Linden Method, delivered by LAR Coaches, addresses this directly. Across more than 650,000 recoveries in 42 countries, the same pattern repeats: as the underlying anxiety resolves, the avoidance map shrinks back to nothing. The world reopens.
Recovery from your front room
A specific advantage for people with agoraphobia: every LAR Coaching session is delivered via Zoom, Phone or FaceTime. You do not have to leave the house to start recovery. You do not have to travel to a clinic. The work begins exactly where you are, on your terms, at your pace. As the underlying anxiety reduces, the urge to expand naturally returns — without being forced.
For families and partners
If you are supporting someone with agoraphobia, please do not pressure them to "just try" leaving. Pressure tends to backfire. The right approach is to support a structured recovery plan. We work directly with families who want to help.
Practical first steps
The honest invitation
Agoraphobia is recoverable. The world reopens. A free 30-minute Recovery Call is the first step, and you can do it from where you are. We never look back, only looking forward.
Agoraphobia recovery — by city
LAR Coaches work with Agoraphobia clients worldwide by Zoom, Phone or FaceTime. Below are city-specific recovery guides for Agoraphobia in 28 of our most active locations.