Understanding Balance Problems
Feeling unsteady, floaty, or like the ground is subtly moving can be exhausting. Balance issues often follow a vestibular event (BPPV, vestibular migraine, neuritis/labyrinthitis, Ménière’s) or a season of high stress, fatigue, illness, or overwhelm. Even when medical tests are “normal,” the sensation of imbalance can linger shrinking confidence and making everyday tasks feel unpredictable.
At DizzinessTherapy, we specialise in the mind–body side of persistent dizziness and imbalance helping you turn down the nervous system “alarm,” rebuild steadiness, and re-enter life with practical skills.
How Balance Works
Your steadiness depends on three systems working together:
- Inner ear (vestibular): senses head motion and gravity
- Eyes (visual): anchors you in space
- Body sensors (proprioception): tells the brain where your joints and muscles are
Your brain blends these inputs into one “map.” After a dizzy event or during stress and hyper-vigilance the brain can over-check normal signals. That learned over-protection makes safe movement and visuals feel “too loud,” creating ongoing wobbliness even when you’re medically safe. The fix is not forcing or avoiding it’s gentle retraining.
Common Experiences We See
Your steadiness depends on three systems working together:
Rocking/swaying or a light, floaty unsteadiness
Veering to one side or feeling “not planted” when walking
Heightened anxiety and constant body-checking
Fear of falling, driving, or leaving home; avoidance of certain environments
Fatigue, brain fog, trouble focusing (especially after busy places/screens)
These experiences are real and valid and changeable with the right approach.
Our Therapeutic Approach (Mind–Body Support, Not Physio)
We don’t diagnose or perform vestibular exercises/repositioning. We work alongside your medical and physiotherapy care, focusing on the nervous-system patterns that keep imbalance “turned up.”
Your support program may include:
Education & reassurance
Clear explanations of why you still feel off—and a simple roadmap so fear drops and progress becomes repeatable.
Psychotherapy & hypnotherapy
Skills to soften catastrophising, bracing, and hyper-vigilance; update subconscious protection habits; rebuild trust in movement and visuals.
Breathwork & nervous-system regulation
Practical tools (longer exhales, soft-gaze anchors, pacing and wind-down routines) that turn the body’s alarm down.
Supportive counselling
A safe space to process the frustration, identity shifts, and relationship/work impacts—then design workable, values-based days.
Mind-body strategies
Gentle, graded re-entry: short “somatic walking” reps, micro-shifts when standing, bite-size visual/motion exposure, sleep and nutrition anchors, and light strength for confidence.
We prioritise tiny wins you can repeat tomorrow. Consistency beats intensity; “B-minus” practice builds durable steadiness.
What Progress Looks Like
- Less body-checking; more moments of normal
- Shorter recovery after errands, screens, or social time
- Busier visuals feel tolerable → manageable → boring
- Walking, driving, work, and travel return without white-knuckling
Who This Is For?
- You’ve had appropriate medical checks and still feel unsteady.
- You’re ready for a skills-based, trauma-aware plan that calms the system and rebuilds capacity—one small step at a time.
- You want support that complements your GP/ENT/physio care and respects both mind and body.
Sessions & booking
In-person in Brisbane
Start with a free 30-minute consult to map your next steps
Online Australia-wide & internationally
We Care About Our Customers Experience Too
Working with Riaz has been absolutely transformational. He is kind, with a heart of gold. He helped me navigate through my childhood trauma and he gave me a road map to healing
Relief from Dizziness
A life-changing experience.
You can feel the change from the first session.
Highly recommended.
Frequently Asked Questions!
What’s the difference between vertigo and dizziness?
Is dizziness dangerous?
Once a clinician has ruled out urgent causes, the sensations are usually uncomfortable, not unsafe. They feel dramatic because the balance/threat system is loud. When a wave hits: pause, feel your feet, pick one steady object to look at, and breathe out longer for 60–90 seconds. Let it pass like a swell in the ocean. Then gently continue what you were doing.
Will panic attacks ruin my progress?
No. They’re intense but temporary—like a thunderstorm. When one hits, name it: “My body alarm is loud, but I’m safe.” Sit or stand with support, look at a still object, and ride the wave with longer exhales. When it settles, do one small, normal action (wash a cup, step outside). That teaches your brain you don’t have to hide from life.
Should I join dizziness forums?
Community can help but choose carefully. Spaces that collect worst-case stories can spike fear and compulsive checking. Look for solution-focused groups where wins are shared, progress is measured in tiny steps, and people talk about living not just symptoms. A practical rule: if you leave the forum more anxious than you entered, unfollow for a month. Replace scrolling with five minutes of skill practice or a text to a supportive friend. Curate your inputs like your diet.
How long does recovery take?
It varies. Some feel meaningful change in weeks, others over months. What predicts faster progress? Consistency over intensity, tiny daily exposures, process focus, and kinder self-talk. What slows it? All-or-nothing goals, constant body-checking, and waiting to “feel ready” before living. Compare only with yesterday-you. If you’re doing the right things, improvement can be sneaky: more normal moments, longer stretches of “forgetting,” fewer meltdowns after busy days. Those are the real markers.