A scam doesnโt just threaten your bank balanceโit hijacks your nervous system. Many people describe the same reaction: shaking hands, racing heart, nausea, tunnel vision, shame, and a desperate urge to โfix it now.โ
Thatโs not weakness. Itโs your brainโs threat responseโfight/flight/freezeโkicking in.
This guide gives you a calm-first, action-second plan: how to steady yourself enough to make good decisions, plus the UK steps that protect your money and identity.
Why scams feel so physically overwhelming
Scams are designed to trigger:
- Urgency (โact now or lose everythingโ)
- Authority (bank, police, HMRC, crypto โsupportโ)
- Emotion (fear, hope, love, embarrassment)
- Isolation (โdonโt tell anyoneโ)
Your body responds as if itโs danger in real life. Stress hormones rise, thinking narrows, and youโre more likely to follow instructionsโeven if they donโt make sense.
First: calm your nervous system in 90 seconds
Before you call anyone or click anything, do this:
The 3-step reset
- Plant your feet on the floor and press them down.
- Breathe out longer than you breathe in (inhale 4 seconds, exhale 6โ8 seconds) for 6 cycles.
- Name 5 things you can see (out loud if you can).
This interrupts panic enough to help you act effectively.
If youโre shaking: hold a cold glass of water or run wrists under cool water for 20โ30 seconds.
Second: the โfirst hourโ checklist (do this even if youโre not sure)
1) Stop the leak
- Donโt reply to messages or calls.
- Donโt click links again.
- Screenshot anything useful (numbers, emails, payment references).
2) Secure money
- If you shared bank details, paid money, or authorised a payment: contact your bank immediately using the number on the back of your card or the official app. Ask them to freeze cards, stop payments, and open a fraud case.
3) Lock down accounts
- Change passwords on your email first (email controls resets for everything).
- Turn on 2-factor authentication for email and banking.
- If you reused passwords anywhere else, change those too.
4) Reduce identity risk
If you shared personal details (DOB, address, ID photos), consider placing alerts with UK credit reference agencies and monitor activity.
Third: UK reporting steps (fast + useful)
Even if you feel embarrassed, reporting helps you and prevents others being targeted.
Report it here
- Report Fraud / Action Fraud (UK national reporting centre).
- FCA scam reporting (especially if it involves investments, โbrokers,โ crypto platforms, or financial services).
(If you want, tell me what type of scam it was and Iโll list the exact official places to report in one neat checklist.)
The emotions after a scam: shame is normalโbut not helpful
Most victims say the worst feeling isnโt the moneyโitโs the self-blame:
- โHow did I fall for that?โ
- โI should have known.โ
- โI canโt tell anyone.โ
Hereโs the truth: scams work because they are engineeredโwith scripts, persuasion design, and timing. Smart people get hit every day.
A healthier self-talk script
Try:
โI was targeted. I reacted like a human under pressure. Now Iโm protecting myself.โ
How to tell if your body is stuck in โthreat modeโ
Common signs in the days after:
- Sleep problems or vivid dreams
- Intrusive replaying (โwhat if I hadโฆโ)
- Compulsive checking bank apps
- Feeling jumpy when the phone rings
- Brain fog / trouble focusing
These usually ease as you regain control and take practical steps.
A 24-hour recovery plan (simple and realistic)
In the next 2 hours
- Do the bank/security steps above
- Eat something small + drink water
- Tell one trusted person (this reduces shame and helps you think clearly)
By the end of the day
- Make a list: what happened, what you shared, what you paid, what actions you took
- Save all evidence in one folder (screenshots, emails, numbers)
Over the next week
- Monitor accounts and credit
- Block unknown numbers; consider call screening
- Watch out for recovery scams (โwe can get your money back for a feeโ)โthese often target victims next
For friends and family: how to support someone whoโs been scammed
What helps:
- โYouโre not stupid. This happens.โ
- โLetโs do the bank steps together.โ
- โWeโll take it one step at a time.โ
What doesnโt help:
- โHow could you?โ
- โI told you so.โ
- Pushing them to relive details repeatedly
FAQ
Why do I feel sick and shaky after a scam?
Because your body treats it like a real threat. Stress hormones rise, and physical symptoms (nausea, shaking, racing heart) are common.
What should I do first: calm down or call the bank?
Do a 60โ90 second reset, then call the bank. Youโll make fewer mistakes if your nervous system is steadier.
What if Iโm not 100% sure it was a scam?
Still act. Freezing cards, changing passwords, and reporting suspicious activity is appropriate even when youโre unsure.
Why do scammers call again after the first contact?
They try to keep you in urgency or shame. Also, victims are often targeted by โrecovery scammersโ who claim they can get money back.
When should I talk to a professional?
If anxiety, sleep issues, or panic symptoms last more than a few weeksโor you feel unsafeโspeak to a GP or a qualified mental health professional.
Safety note (as you prefer)
If scam stress is causing panic attacks, insomnia, or severe anxiety, please speak with your GP or a qualified medical professionalโsupport helps and you donโt have to handle it alone.




