Panic is a common condition comprising of a raised
heart rate, pale and sweaty skin, wide eyes, and
disconnection of the brain from the mouth. It manages
to afflict a wide range of people across the whole
gamut of social classes. Students seek panic by
spending their time in the university bars rather than
the library near exam time. Politicians achieve it by
making rash statements of policy in the run-up to
elections. Doctors discover it when they take on
particularly inventive patients, and parents succumb
when they realise that they didn't listen to their own
parents and thus have no idea how to control their own
offspring.
People in the grip of a good panic find themselves
spiralling into a deep inescapable pit of rash
decisions, unhelpful comments and threatening bowel
rumblings. Panics may last between a few seconds and
an entire lifetime and cannot be cured, though they
eventually recede when they judge for themselves that
they have run their course. Prevention can be sought
by the careful application of views of the countryside
and nice grassy fields. Ineffectual remedies include
excessive activity to try and distract the mind from
the panic: going to sleep, taking a bath, finding
someone to say, "there there, it'll all be okay", and
doing absolutely nothing in the hope that it goes away
or turns out to be a dream.
Historical panickers include Charles I, the Emperor
Nero, Richard Nixon and General Custer. Panic is
rarely fatal but can often lead to an unsightly mess
in the streets beside the high-rise buildings of
financial institutions.