I went to the store to buy pork ribs and came home 

I was just cooking dinner when the nightmare began.

One second, I was calmly turning pork ribs in the pan.

The next, I froze, staring at something pale and stringy poking out of the sizzling m.e αt.

My heart dropped. My brain screamed one word: w.o ŕm. I killed the heat, grabbed a towel, and lifted it with shaking fingers.

For almost an hour, I sat there at the table, turning it under the light, feeling my stomach twist harder with every second.

The more I looked, the more disgusted I felt. 

That tiny, horrifying discovery in the pan sent my mind spiraling through every worst-case scenario.

I imagined parasites, contamination, some hidden danger lurking in food I’d trusted a thousand times before.

But once the panic settled and I really examined it, the truth was far less dramatic and far more ordinary: it wasn’t a w.o ŕm at all. It was a tendon, just fibrous connective tissue that had become more visible as the m.e αt cooked and tightened.

Realizing that didn’t instantly erase the disgust, or bring my appetite back. Yet there was a strange relief in knowing my fear had outrun reality.

That moment in the kitchen became a reminder of how quickly our minds fill in the blanks with monsters.

Sometimes the thing we’re most afraid of is just a normal part of life, seen up close for the first time.

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