I couldn’t shake the feeling that the wall had betrayed me. It was supposed to separate “out there” from “in here,” to keep the wild, unpredictable world at a distance. Instead, it had become a thin, fragile membrane, and something on the other side was pushing through. Each tiny movement along the crack made my chest tighten, as if the house and I were sharing the same trapped breath. I expected menace, some lurking threat that justified the panic racing through my body.
But when the truth finally revealed itself—a small lizard, jammed and trembling—my fear collapsed into shame. This tiny creature wasn’t there to harm me; it was fighting for its own escape. As I freed it and watched it vanish, the silence that followed felt like a mirror. The real invasion hadn’t been in the wall, but in my own certainty. I saw how quickly I turned the unknown into danger, and how much softer the world becomes when I choose compassion before fear.