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No Panic is a self-help wellness app with a one-tap panic button, breathing, grounding, body scan, visualization, stretching, journaling, affirmations, and meditation.
No Panic started from a simple, uncomfortable observation: when a panic
attack actually hits, the tools we're told to use fail us. Your heart is
racing, your thoughts are spiraling, and you're expected to remember a
breathing technique, find the right meditation, sit through a 90-second
intro, maybe create an account first. In the exact moment you need help
most, everything asks too much of you.
I wanted the opposite of that. One button. No login. No setup. No signal
required. You open the app mid-attack, tap Emergency, and within a second
you're being walked — one gentle step at a time — through breathing,
grounding your senses, and feeling safe in your body again. That was the
whole app on day one: a panic button and ten calming steps you could swipe
through with your thumb.
I also built it bilingual (English and Ukrainian) from the very first
release, because calm shouldn't only be available in one language — and
because the people I most wanted to reach needed it in their own.
Most mental-wellness apps are designed for your calm days — the
streak-building, the subscription funnels, the polished onboarding. Almost
none are designed for the 60 seconds when you're not calm at all.
So No Panic is built around the crisis moment first, and everything else
second:
- It works offline. Panic doesn't wait for signal. Nothing in the
emergency flow needs the network.
- No account, ever. Friction is the enemy in a crisis. You just open it
and go.
- It's deliberately quiet. Warm, earthy colors, soft typography — no
flashing red, no alarm sounds, no clinical coldness. The interface
itself is supposed to lower your heart rate.
- It's private by default. Journals and medication logs live only on your
device and are never transmitted. Analytics is strictly opt-in, off
unless you say yes.
The bet is that when someone in the middle of an attack opens the app and
it just helps — no barriers, no judgment, no asking — that's what earns
their trust for the calmer days too.
It evolved a lot — and mostly by resisting my own instinct to build
everything at once.
It started as one thing. The entire first version was the panic button
plus ten swipeable tips. I shipped that narrow and made it genuinely good
before adding anything.
Then it grew one modality at a time. Once the core moment worked, I
layered in the tools that help around the crisis: breathing exercises,
5-4-3-2-1 grounding, body scan, guided visualizations, stretching,
meditation, sleep sounds, affirmations, a reading library. Then the tools
that help over time: mood and trigger journaling, a private medication
tracker with reminders, self-assessments, habits, streak-based
achievements, and even distraction games for the moments when nothing
calming lands. The app became a whole toolkit — but only because each
piece had to earn its place next to that first button.
The launch itself taught me humility. Getting through the App Store was
its own curriculum. I had to strip specific paywall wording after review
feedback, get App Tracking Transparency and analytics consent exactly
right, and rewrite store copy repeatedly to be honest about what the app
is (a self-help wellness tool, not a medical device). I learned that
"shipping" a health app is as much about trust, disclosure, and clarity as
it is about code.
And it kept widening its reach. What launched in two languages now speaks
seven. What started as a personal fix became something I hope meets a lot
of people in the same hard moment — and quietly gets them to the other
side of it.
How much of the content is available offline? I tend to spiral when I'm traveling and don't always have a reliable signal, so that would be a dealbreaker for me.
How does the one-tap panic button actually work when you need it most, like does it bypass needing to unlock your phone first?
Does the one-tap panic button just launch whatever exercise you last used, or can you pick a default technique inside settings so it always starts with grounding first?
The breathing exercise with the gentle haptic cues caught me off guard, really helped me slow down on a stressful afternoon. One-tap access is clutch when anxiety hits suddenly.
The panic button is genuinely handy for moments when my brain spirals. Breathing and grounding exercises are simple enough that I actually follow through instead of closing the app.
About No Panic — Calm, in your pocket on Product Hunt
“One tap to calm when a panic attack hits”
No Panic — Calm, in your pocket was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 6 upvotes and 6 comments, placing #54 on the daily leaderboard. No Panic is a self-help wellness app with a one-tap panic button, breathing, grounding, body scan, visualization, stretching, journaling, affirmations, and meditation.
No Panic — Calm, in your pocket was featured in Android (57.3k followers), Health & Fitness (82.9k followers), Meditation (12.7k followers), GitHub (41.3k followers) and Medical (3.4k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 100.5k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted No Panic — Calm, in your pocket?
No Panic — Calm, in your pocket was hunted by Denys Dubov. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
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