The morning began like countless others before it.
The city slowly came alive beneath my balcony—cars moving in distant streams of traffic, scattered birds calling somewhere between buildings, and the lingering smell of damp concrete after a light overnight drizzle. Everything felt ordinary, almost automatic. The kind of morning you don’t really think about, just move through.
I stepped outside, still half-awake, and opened the balcony door to let in the cool air. It was refreshing in that quiet, subtle way that makes you pause for a second before starting your day.
Nothing about that moment suggested anything unusual was about to happen.
A Small Movement in a Familiar Place
As I leaned on the railing with my coffee, watching the muted skyline, something near the edge of the balcony caught my attention.
At first, it was barely noticeable—a slight flicker along the cracked plaster wall. I assumed it was just a trick of light or maybe debris shifting in the breeze.
But then it moved again.
This time, it was clearer. A small, uneven motion tracing the narrow vertical crack in the wall. Slow. Deliberate. Almost struggling.
A strange tension immediately built in my chest. Walls are supposed to feel permanent, dependable. They separate us from uncertainty. Yet right in front of me, something was moving inside one of them, as if the boundary I trusted wasn’t as solid as I believed.
My imagination quickly filled in the blanks. A trapped animal. Something injured. Maybe something worse. The unknown has a way of expanding in the mind far beyond what the eyes actually see.
Still, I couldn’t look away.
From Fear to Curiosity
As I focused more closely, the fear didn’t disappear—but it shifted.
There was no aggression in the movement. No sense of threat. Only persistence. Whatever it was, it wasn’t trying to invade my space. It was trying to escape its own situation.
That realization softened my reaction.
The tension in my shoulders eased slightly, replaced by curiosity—and something closer to concern than fear.
I decided to take a closer look.
A Small Life Revealed
Moving slowly toward the wall, I finally saw it clearly.
A small lizard was wedged in the narrow crack. Its body was partially stuck, its tail twitching faintly as it tried to free itself. It looked exhausted rather than aggressive, as if it had been struggling for a long time before I even noticed it.
The fear I had felt moments earlier dissolved completely.
What remained was empathy.
It wasn’t dangerous. It was vulnerable.
And it was stuck.
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