Here’s What to Do If You Sp

The terror hit before the pain.

One second I was wrestling with my old lawnmower, the next I saw it—clinging to my ankle like it owned me.

Not a mosquito. Not a speck of dirt. A lone star tick, locked in. 

I didn’t scream, but my brain did.

That tiny white-dotted monster felt like a loaded gun pressed against my skin.

As I pulled it off with shaking hands, every horrible story I’d ever heard about ticks played on repeat: Lyme, fevers, rashes, weird allergies.

I washed the bite, trapped the tick, and pretended to be calm for my dog’s sake, even as my thoughts spiraled.

The next days were a strange mix of normal life and silent dread.

I checked the bite spot every few hours, memorizing every freckle, every line.

I wrote down the date, watched for rashes, monitored every ache and chill like a detective afraid of the answer.

But somewhere in that anxious waiting, something shifted. Knowledge slowly replaced panic.

I learned what to watch for, how to protect my yard, my dog, my family—and myself.

The fear never fully vanished, but it turned into something far more powerful: respect, awareness, and the quiet relief of knowing that next time, I won’t be caught unprepared.

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