I froze the moment I saw it. Something strange was clinging to the bathroom tiles—glassy, jelly-like, almost organic in shape. For a second, my mind jumped straight to the worst possibilities: parasites, eggs, some kind of infestation coming from the drain. My girlfriend saw it too, and we both went silent, unsure what we were even looking at. Neither of us touched it. I took photos instead, zooming in and trying to make sense of the object.
Then came the spiral—searching online, reading forums, asking strangers. Every theory felt worse than the last, and the more I looked, the more convinced I became that something was wrong in the apartment. At one point, I even considered calling an exterminator and leaving for the night. The fear grew with every unanswered question, feeding on the uncertainty of not knowing what this strange thing actually was.
Then someone finally gave a simple answer: it wasn’t anything 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 immediate—and a little embarrassing. All that fear came from something completely harmless, misread in the moment. We laughed about it later, but the experience stuck with me.
In the quiet of that bathroom, my imagination had filled every gap with something dangerous. It was a reminder of how quickly the mind can turn uncertainty into panic, and how ordinary things can look frightening when you don’t yet understand them. Sometimes the scariest part isn’t what’s really there—it’s the story your mind builds before you know the truth.