I froze the moment I saw it. Something unusual was stuck to the bathroom tiles, looking “glassy, jelly-like, almost organic in shape.” At first glance, it seemed alarming and impossible to identify.
My mind immediately rushed to the worst conclusions. I started imagining parasites, eggs, or some kind of infestation coming from the drain. My girlfriend noticed it too, and “we both went silent, unsure what we were even looking at.”
Instead of touching it, I took photos and searched for answers online. I zoomed in, read forums, and asked strangers for opinions. But the more I searched, the worse the possibilities seemed. “Every theory felt worse than the last,” and I became convinced there was a serious problem in the apartment.
At one point, the situation felt so unsettling that I considered calling an exterminator and leaving for the night. The uncertainty made the harmless object seem far more threatening than it really was.
Then came the simple explanation: it was not alive at all. “It was just melted hot glue that had dripped, cooled, and hardened into an oddly organic-looking shape on the tile.”
The relief was instant, mixed with a little embarrassment. What had seemed like a frightening mystery turned out to be something completely harmless.
Later, we laughed about the whole experience, but it left an impression on me. The moment showed how easily fear can grow when something is unfamiliar. As the article puts it, “my imagination had filled in every gap with something dangerous.”
Sometimes what scares us most is not reality itself, but the story we create before knowing the truth. “Sometimes the scariest part isn’t what’s really there—it’s the story your mind builds before you know the truth.”