Agoraphobia is one of the most misunderstood conditions in mental health. The dictionary calls it "fear of open spaces". Sufferers know it is something else entirely.
What agoraphobia really is
Agoraphobia is the fear of being in places or situations from which escape would be difficult — or in which help would be unavailable — if a panic attack occurred.
It is not, fundamentally, a fear of the place. It is a fear of having a panic attack in the place. Which is why the same agoraphobic person can feel terrified in a supermarket but completely fine on a remote hill walk: the supermarket has crowds, no obvious exit, social shame potential. The hillside has none of those.
Common avoidance patterns
Why it spreads
Agoraphobia almost always progresses. The person avoids one trigger; the relief reinforces avoidance; the brain generalises; new triggers appear. Without intervention, the safe zone can shrink to a single room.
Why standard exposure therapy is gruelling
The NHS pathway typically involves graded exposure — going to feared places repeatedly until the brain learns they are safe. This can work, but it is slow, distressing, and dropout rates are high.
The LAR approach
LAR Coaching does not start by sending you back into feared places. It starts by addressing the underlying sensitised anxiety response that produces the panic in the first place. Once panic stops being a regular event, the fear of having one dissolves naturally — and travel returns without forced exposure.
Charles Linden himself recovered from severe agoraphobia using exactly this principle. The method has since produced 650,000+ recoveries worldwide, including from cases of housebound agoraphobia of 15+ years' duration.
The next step
If any of this resonates, book a free 30-minute Recovery Call with one of our LAR Coaches. No pressure, no obligation — just a real conversation about what is happening to you and whether the LAR programme is the right fit. Sessions are delivered worldwide via Zoom, Phone or FaceTime.