I woke up with a sharp, uncomfortable sensation on my upper back, the kind that makes you freeze before fully opening your eyes. For a moment, I was convinced something was biting me or crawling across my skin.
Half-awake and disoriented, I reached behind me and felt something small, dry, and oddly textured. My mind immediately filled in the worst possibilities—an insect, a parasite, something that had somehow ended up in the bed during the night.
When I finally turned on the light, the feeling in the room shifted, but the confusion only deepened. On the bed lay a small, shriveled object that looked entirely out of place. My family gathered around as I tried to explain what had happened, each of us leaning in but keeping a cautious distance. In those first moments, no one had a clear answer.
The uncertainty made everything feel more intense than it likely was. We considered every possibility, from an insect to something that had fallen from the ceiling, but none of the explanations seemed to fit completely.
It wasn’t until we took a closer look—zooming in on photos and comparing them online—that the truth became clear. What had caused so much alarm was nothing more than a dried piece of cooked meat, likely chicken, that had somehow ended up in the sheets. How it got there remains unclear, but the answer itself was far less important than the fear it briefly created.
Once we understood what it was, the tension in the room faded almost instantly, replaced by a mix of relief and disbelief. There was no infestation, no hidden danger, no explanation beyond an unfortunate accident.
Still, the experience lingered in my mind. It wasn’t the object itself that stayed with me, but the brief, unsettling moment of not knowing—how quickly the ordinary can feel alarming when the mind fills in the gaps before the facts arrive.