It started as a normal day in the woods.
A few friends and I had gone hiking, the kind of trip where you don’t think too much about where you step or what brushes against you. The trail was narrow in places, overgrown in others, but nothing unusual. We laughed, pushed through branches, and kept moving.
I didn’t notice anything wrong at the time.
It wasn’t until later—back home, under the harsh light of my bathroom—that everything shifted.
At first, I thought my eyes were playing tricks on me.
There, on my skin, were thin, dark spikes. They looked like they were emerging from beneath the surface, as if something inside me was pushing outward. For a split second, my brain refused to process it.
Then the panic hit.
My thoughts spiraled instantly. Parasites. Insects. Some kind of infestation I hadn’t felt until it was too late. The more I stared, the worse it seemed. They looked unnatural, almost deliberate—like something out of a horror movie.
I froze, barely breathing, convinced I was watching something alive.
Every second stretched longer than the last.
I started replaying the hike in my mind, searching for the moment it could have happened. Had I brushed against something? Felt a sting I ignored? Walked through the wrong patch of plants?
The uncertainty made it worse.
It’s strange how quickly your mind can turn a small, unexplained detail into something terrifying. In that moment, logic didn’t stand a chance against imagination.
But eventually, I forced myself to slow down.
I leaned closer to the mirror, trying to see more clearly. The lighting in the bathroom was harsh, casting shadows that made everything look more dramatic than it was. So I moved to a better light source, took a deep breath, and looked again.
That’s when something changed.
The “spikes” weren’t moving.
Not even slightly.
They didn’t pulse, shift, or react. They just… sat there. Thin, rigid, almost brittle-looking. When I gently touched one, it didn’t feel like part of my body—it felt foreign. Like something resting on the surface rather than growing from within.
That realization was the first crack in the fear.
I grabbed a pair of tweezers and, with a mix of hesitation and determination, carefully pinched one of the spikes. It slid out with almost no resistance.
No pain. No reaction.
Just a tiny, dark sliver.
I stared at it in disbelief.
It wasn’t something alive. It wasn’t growing.
It was a thorn.
Once I saw it for what it was, everything started to make sense. During the hike, I must have pushed through a patch of thorny brush or dry grass. Some of the tiny, sharp pieces had broken off and embedded themselves just enough in my skin to look like they were coming from inside.
Under poor lighting—and with a panicked mind—they had turned into something much worse.
One by one, I removed them.
Each time, the same result: no pain, no movement, no mystery. Just small plant fragments that didn’t belong there. Afterward, I cleaned the area carefully, disinfecting the skin and making sure nothing was left behind.
By the next day, the redness had already started to fade.
What had felt like the beginning of something horrifying turned out to be nothing more than nature doing what it does—being sharp, stubborn, and easy to overlook in the moment.
Looking back, the most unsettling part wasn’t what was on my skin.
It was how quickly my mind filled in the blanks.
Fear has a way of building entire stories out of incomplete information. It takes something small and unknown and stretches it into something overwhelming. In reality, the explanation is often far simpler than we expect—but in the moment, it rarely feels that way.
That experience stuck with me.
Not because it was dangerous, but because it was a reminder.
Sometimes, the scariest things aren’t actually there.
They’re just the stories we tell ourselves before we take a closer look.