It sat there on the cold bathroom tiles, completely out of place—quiet, odd, and faintly disturbing.
My girlfriend and I stood staring at it far longer than we should have, unable to explain why such a small, shapeless blob felt so unsettling. It looked like some damp, organic mass, the kind of thing that didn’t belong in a clean, modern bathroom. The longer we looked, the less sense it made.
We ran through every explanation we could think of, each one more unsettling than the last. A parasite? Some strange type of mold? Something that had fallen from inside the walls? The more we speculated, the more the bathroom started to feel like a space where something had quietly gone wrong.
Even as we whispered back and forth, part of us knew we were overreacting—but the unease didn’t fade.

Two adults, completely thrown off by an unidentifiable patch on the floor. It was a strange reminder of how fragile our sense of normal can be when something unfamiliar shows up in a place we think we understand.
We kept circling it, unsure whether it was harmless or something to worry about. My girlfriend voiced concerns about toxins or hidden damage. I tried to calm her down, though I felt just as uneasy. The real problem was not knowing—our imaginations filled in every gap with something worse.
When we finally discovered what it actually was—a harmless but odd-looking slime mold that often appears in damp areas—the relief didn’t come all at once.
There was no danger, nothing serious. Still, the experience stuck with me.
We scrubbed the tiles clean, opened the windows, and eventually laughed at how worked up we’d been. But something about that moment stayed behind. It was a reminder of how easily the unfamiliar can shake your confidence.
Now, whenever I step into that bathroom, I find myself glancing at the floor without thinking. Not because I expect to see anything strange—but because once something ordinary has startled you, it never feels quite the same again.
