Insomnia’s sister
Transients cousin
Fluidities Aunt
Instabilities mom
Anxieties grandmother
“Sleeplessness”
Words, 11 of them.

Insomnia’s sister
Transients cousin
Fluidities Aunt
Instabilities mom
Anxieties grandmother
“Sleeplessness”
Words, 11 of them.

Sitting up, I squinted toward the clock, trying to see if it was late enough to get up. Late enough — the quiet internal permission slip. If it’s before 3 a.m., it’s too early. 3 a.m. itself is borderline — only viable if I’d gone to bed early. But anything after 3… preferably closer to 4… means I’ve officially crossed into the “acceptable to rise” zone.
4:12 a.m. Glowing digits. That was late enough—time to begin.
I moved like a ghost, easing myself upright and reaching for my phone with slow, steady fingers. The strap hooks — those cursed, tiny clinks of metal — threatened to tap the glass nightstand. But I was careful. Every sound at this hour stretches out, echoing as if it’s trying to wake the house. Success. No clink.
Phone in hand, I padded the three steps to the bathroom door. The first hurdle: Don’t let the acrylic nails tap the resin door. Second: Turn the knob just right. Not too fast, not too slow. Just enough so the door didn’t yawn open with a creak that would snap the peace in half.
Inside, I turned to the next challenge — closing the door silently behind me. I rotated the knob while pulling it shut, inch by inch, not daring to breathe. Almost… there— Pop!
Damn. Not quite silent. But done.
I didn’t turn on the light. I never do. My husband’s eyelids are basically tissue paper, and any sudden brightness sends his entire body lurching awake like he’s been shot. So instead, I thumbed the flashlight on my phone and crept to the toilet. The usual. Routine. Human.
After finishing, I reached into the closet and grabbed a pair of yoga pants and a sweatshirt — easy, uncommitted choices. Something I learned in therapy: not every decision has to be made immediately. And choosing an outfit for the day was certainly not a decision I needed to make under the glare of a cell phone light at 4 a.m.
Now… slippers. Where did I leave them?
I only wear slippers with rubber soles. Just in case I have to go outside. I let myself go barefoot exactly once a week — right after the house cleaner comes. I love that soft slide across freshly mopped tile. But the rest of the time? Barriers. Always barriers.
Ah — there they were. Tucked by the sink. I must’ve slipped out of them last night with future-me in mind.
Left foot in. Then right. Bent the left knee, latched the ankle strap. Bent the right knee, latched—
And then I felt it.
Soft. Furry. A brush of cool movement, right across the top of my foot.
At first, I thought maybe it was just a bit of tissue or something loose, stuck between slipper and skin. I wiggled my foot.
It moved. It moved more than I did.
That wasn’t fuzz.
That wasn’t normal.
That wasn’t right.
A chill clawed its way up my spine as I shook my foot again — faster this time, harder — trying to convince myself it was just lint, just a trick of sensation. But no. No, it moved with intent. With awareness. And it was cool to the touch. Fuzz isn’t cool. Fuzz isn’t… alive.
I froze for a breath that was entirely too long. Then panic took over.
I jerked my leg. The strap held tight.
I stomped — once, twice — thinking maybe I could crush whatever was inside without having to see it.
It didn’t fall off. It clung.
I reached down, yanked the strap off, and kicked the slipper across the bathroom. It landed with a loud slap. I flicked the flashlight beam toward it, the light shaking in my hand—
And there it was.
Sprawled halfway out of the slipper. Brown. Furry. Legs twitching. About the size of a 50-cent piece, maybe more if you count the horribly mobile legs.
A spider.
I stood, breathing like I’d just run a mile uphill, heartbeat jackhammering. I didn’t care about waking anyone anymore. I flipped on the light.
I needed confirmation.
With trembling fingers, I took a photo. My only defense in the moment was identification — like naming a demon before it devours you.
AI said it was a wolf spider. A hunter. Not venomous to humans, but aggressive and fast. Curious. The kind that moves toward you, not away.
I stared at the picture while my body still buzzed with the memory of its legs across my skin.
Then I grabbed the slipper — the safe one — and with a single, hard thump, I ended it.
Afterward, I just stood there, breathing in the silence, surrounded by a sleeping house and shadows that felt just a little too aware. The flashlight still on. The image still open on my phone.
I thanked whatever silent force spared me a bite.
Because that spider had been on my foot. For too long.
Moving.
Thinking.
Waiting.