Mal de Débarquement Syndrome (MdDS) Support

What is MdDS?

Most travellers have felt brief “sea legs” after a boat or flight. For some, that feeling doesn’t switch off. Mal de Débarquement Syndrome (MdDS) is the name for ongoing rocking, swaying or bobbing that continues for weeks or months after motion often a cruise, long-haul flight, or even a long car or train trip. Unlike BPPV or classic vertigo, MdDS is usually continuous rather than coming in short bursts, and it can touch every part of daily life.

Your experience is real even when scans or hearing tests are “normal.” MdDS is best understood as a nervous system that adapted to constant motion and then struggled to re-adapt to land. Stress, fatigue and over-monitoring can keep the “motion volume” turned up.

Common Experiences

People with MdDS often describe:

Rocking, swaying or bobbing, as if still on a boat
Fatigue, low stamina, or needing more recovery time
Brain fog, slower thinking, trouble concentrating
Headaches or migraine features (light/sound sensitivity)
Anxiety, low mood, frustration, or feeling misunderstood
Feeling worse when standing still, sometimes easier during passive motion (e.g., being a car passenger)

It can feel like being “trapped in a moving world.” You’re not alone and you’re not imagining it.

Why it can stick around

After prolonged motion, your brain smartly learns a “moving baseline.” Back on land, it may keep predicting motion, and the body’s alarm system stays on guard. You feel unsteady → you brace and watch for it → the alarm gets louder. The way out isn’t pushing harder or avoiding life; it’s gentle retraining teaching your system, step by step, that land is safe again.

Our Approach (Mind–Body Support, Not Physio or Medical Care)

We don’t diagnose, prescribe, or do vestibular manoeuvres. We work alongside your GP/ENT/neurologist/vestibular physio by supporting the emotional, psychological and nervous-system patterns that keep MdDS loud.

What sessions can include:

Education & reassurance

Clear, plain-English explanations of MdDS and how stress, fatigue and attention can amplify sensations—so fear drops and confidence grows.

Psychotherapy & hypnotherapy

Gentle, skills-based work to soften catastrophising, hyper-vigilance and bracing; rebuild trust in movement, visuals and daily routines.

Breathwork & nervous-system regulation

Practical tools (longer exhales, soft-gaze drills, pacing, wind-down rituals) that turn the body’s alarm down and support steadier balance.

Supportive counselling

A safe, validating space to process frustration and isolation, plan conversations at work/home, and set doable, compassionate goals.

Mind-body strategies

Stepwise, repeatable practices short outdoor walks, eyes-open balance moments, bite-size visual exposure, sleep/nutrition anchors, light strength that build steadiness without all-or-nothing crashes.

We prioritise tiny wins you can repeat tomorrow. Small, steady steps re-map the system faster than heroic pushes or total avoidance.

Triggers & everyday supports

Common load-builders include poor sleep, long screen sessions, stress, heat, skipped meals, dehydration, and sensory overload. We’ll help you test simple tweaks without rigid rules so you learn which levers matter most for you and build a personal flare plan you can rely on.

How We Complement Medical Care

What Progress Looks Like

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

Frequently Asked Questions!

Vertigo feels like you or the room is spinning, tilting, or moving when it isn’t like getting off a merry-go-round. Dizziness is a broader word people use for feeling floaty, woozy, light-headed, off-balance, or “walking on a trampoline.” Both experiences are real and very common. After serious causes are ruled out, the sensation is usually your nervous system being over-protective, not broken. Quick helps: steady your gaze on a fixed point, plant your feet hip-width apart, breathe out a bit longer than you breathe in, and let the wave pass without bracing against it.

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.

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.

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.

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.

Book a Session

If you’ve experiencing chronic dizziness and anxiety, we are here to help. Schedule your FREE Initial Consultation.

Disclaimer

The Dizziness Clinic – provides hypnotherapy, psychotherapy, counselling and breathwork as supportive therapies. We do not provide medical diagnosis, prescriptions or repositioning manoeuvres. Our services complement medical care and are not a substitute. If you experience sudden, severe or worsening symptoms, seek immediate medical attention.