I didn’t think much of it at first. I woke up, stretched, and went to the bathroom like any normal day—but the second I looked in the mirror, I froze. My tongue didn’t look right. It was dry, cracked, almost textured in a way I had never seen before. I ran it across my teeth, expecting it to feel normal, but it didn’t. Something was off, and deep down, I knew this wasn’t just a random thing.
At first, I blamed dehydration. Then maybe stress. I told myself it would go away by the next day. But it didn’t. In fact, it got worse. The surface looked uneven, patches appearing where there shouldn’t be any. Eating felt different. Even speaking started to feel strange, like my own mouth wasn’t functioning the way it used to. That’s when the panic slowly started creeping in.
I started thinking back to the past few weeks, replaying everything in my head. Changes in routine, late nights, things I didn’t pay attention to at the time. It’s funny how the body keeps score even when you don’t. What felt normal then suddenly didn’t feel so harmless anymore. There were signs—I just didn’t connect them until it was right in front of me.
The more I looked into it, the more I realized how easily things can show up in places you’d never expect. Your body doesn’t stay quiet when something’s wrong. It signals you, sometimes subtly, sometimes in ways you can’t ignore. And this—this was impossible to ignore. It was like my body was forcing me to stop and actually pay attention for once.
By the end of the day, I wasn’t brushing it off anymore. I understood that whatever caused this didn’t happen overnight—and it wasn’t something to ignore or hide. Some things start small, almost invisible, until they’re not. And when your own reflection starts showing you the truth, you don’t get to pretend everything is fine anymore.