It felt just like any other morning.
The city slowly came to life in the distance as sunlight poured across the floor. I took my coffee, opened the balcony door, and moved forward—until I stopped.
I was immediately stopped by something on the ground.
A tiny, whitish form nestled close to the railing’s corner. It wasn’t supposed to be there. It appeared soft but oddly defined against the gray tiles, almost translucent. My body reacted before my head could, causing me to freeze in the middle of a step.
It remained still.
The worst thing was that.
I could have named it right away if it had twitched, crawled, or made any noise. However, it remained still. Quiet. Even so. Not known.
And the rest was filled up by my imagination.
With my eyes fixed on it, I took a hesitant step back. It appeared to be organic from a distance. Not garbage. Not rubble. Something—living, or at least recently living.
Instead of approaching myself, I reached for my phone and used the camera to zoom in. The details made the image worse as it sharpened.
It was divided into sections.
ribbed.
curved in the shape of a little crescent.
No eyes are visible. No obvious legs. It was just an odd, white building that didn’t belong on a balcony, in my opinion.
My mind raced.
Was that an insect I was unaware of? Something intrusive? Something hazardous? Had it originated from one of my plants, or worse, from within?
I began to pace inside, looking back every few seconds as if it may move if I looked away for too long.
In the hopes that someone might recognize it, I even snapped pictures and forwarded them to friends. The answers weren’t very helpful. There were a few recommendations that made it seem even worse, but otherwise it was simply bewilderment.
I came to a realization at that point.
What it was didn’t scare me.
I had no idea what it was, therefore I was terrified.
So I did what I ought to have done all along.
I did some research on it.
I found a match after going through a ton of pictures.
Suddenly, everything was different.
It was larvae of beetles.
A basic grub.
Not harmful.
most likely crawled out of one of my planters after the earth moved or was dumped there by a bird. Nothing exceptional. Nothing hazardous. A tiny piece of nature in the wrong location.
Almost immediately, the terror vanished.
A few minutes before, the same object that had been uncomfortable now seemed… normal. even fascinating. The light hue was no longer unsettling. It was simply the subsurface appearance of these larvae. There was nothing menacing about the silence. It was typical conduct.
To be honest, I was a little ashamed.
Using a piece of paper, I carefully scooped it up and placed it to the earth outdoors so it could burrow back into a suitable location.
After that, I returned inside, took a seat with my now-cold coffee, and observed the vacant area on the balcony.
Out there, nothing had changed.
My comprehension alone had.
I became aware of how rapidly dread fills in the blanks in the mind when there are no solutions. For the simple reason that it’s unknown, something small and innocuous might feel overwhelming.
Knowing what you’re truly looking at is sometimes the only thing separating dread from serenity.