When I finally opened the box, the anticlimax was almost painful. No ticking, no confession, no threat wrapped in bubble wrap—just ordinary objects meant for a purpose I hadn’t understood. The relief came with a sting of humiliation, but also with an unexpected clarity: the danger had never been in the cardboard. It had been in the stories I’d written inside my own head.
That realization lingered long after my pulse slowed. I began to notice how often I mistake unfamiliar for unsafe, how quickly I let an unanswered question become a catastrophe. The box became a quiet teacher, a reminder that uncertainty is not the same as doom. Now, when something arrives in my life unannounced—a change, a silence, a new beginning—I try to hold my fear at arm’s length, open it gently, and wait for the truth to speak for itself.



