Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Last night, I went into the garage, turned on the light, and saw this on the wall.

“I inched closer, half expecting it to leap at my face.” Up close, it appeared unreal: a bright yellow shell with black spots and six spiny projections, gripping the wall without moving. I froze between fear and curiosity, quickly snapping a photo and sharing it with friends, who responded with panicked guesses and horror-like theories.

Later I searched online with my heart still racing and scrolled through images, finding similar results while my fear slowly faded, replaced by curiosity.

Eventually I found it: “Gasteracantha, the spiny orb-weaver.” Not an alien creature, but a spiny orb-weaver spider known for its unusual shell and web-building behavior.

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Seeing it online, I realized: “Not an alien, not venomous doom…” but a harmless, strange architect of nature. The fear drained away and turned into awe at how something so unusual could exist unnoticed in my own space.

That night I left it there, and the garage felt different—no longer empty, but shared. It was a “tiny, harmless monster that turned out to be a wonder,” a reminder that even fearsome-looking creatures can be harmless and fascinating.



 

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