Heart Panic - Happy

It felt like standing on a cliff edge in a dream where you could fly. The thrill was the terror.

Her phone buzzed. “Seven okay? I’m making that pasta you like.”

She’d spent so many years building a sturdy shelter against bad news—walls of contingency plans, roofs of low expectations. She knew how to handle a crisis. A panic attack over a deadline? Manageable. A spiral over a fight? Routine. But this? A panic attack because the world was smiling at her? Happy Heart Panic

Elara should have felt light. Instead, she felt the ground give way.

Her heartbeat didn’t race with fear. It raced with a terrifying, unfamiliar joy. It was a flamenco dance in her chest—too loud, too fast, too happy to be safe. Her palms were sweaty, not from dread, but from the sheer pressure of goodness . It felt like standing on a cliff edge

Instead of fighting the wild rhythm in her chest, she let it play. She imagined each frantic beat was a door swinging open. One for the project. One for her mother. One for the text that said “Tonight.” The panic wasn't a warning. It was an overflow. Her heart, after years of rationing hope, was trying to relearn abundance.

It was a Tuesday afternoon, and Elara’s heart was trying to escape through her ribs. “Seven okay

The flamenco softened into a waltz. The cliff edge became solid ground. And the joy, once so sharp it hurt, settled into a warm, humming glow in her stomach.

Her boss had finally approved her project. Her mother’s tests had come back clear. Her rent was paid. The boy she’d been nervously texting had just sent, “Tonight? My place. I’ll cook.”

Elara closed her eyes. She did the only thing she knew how to do when her body betrayed her. She leaned into it.

She took a slow, shaking breath. Then another.