
It returns in the same position.
Not announced, not marked,
just there again,
as if it had been waiting slightly out of view
for the exact moment I stopped checking.
I recognize it immediately.
Not by shape or sound,
but by the way my body adjusts around it
before I have decided to.
There is no surprise in the recognition.
Only a small correction,
like placing a cup back in the space it already fits.
It does not explain where it has been.
It does not need to.
It settles into the same part of the day,
the same hour that holds nothing else firmly enough
to resist it.
I notice that I make room.
Not deliberately.
Not generously.
Just enough.
The chair shifts slightly.
The silence widens.
The thought I was holding pauses,
then steps aside.
It is not identical.
Something about its edges has changed.
Or mine have.
The distance between us is smaller now,
or easier to cross,
or already crossed without being named.
I test it without moving.
I wait to see if it will leave again
if I do not acknowledge it.
It does not.
It remains,
not pressing,
not insisting,
just present in the way things are
when they have learned they do not need permission.
Time continues around it.
Minutes pass.
Objects remain where they were placed.
Nothing in the room reacts strongly enough
to register the difference.
Still, something has shifted.
Not in the direction of meaning,
not toward resolution,
but in the simple fact
that it is here again
and I have not stopped it.
I do not ask how long it will stay.
I do not ask if it will return again.
Those questions feel unnecessary
in the presence of something
that has already answered them
by arriving.
About the Creator
Alain SUPPINI
I’m Alain — a French critical care anesthesiologist who writes to keep memory alive. Between past and present, medicine and words, I search for what endures.

Comments (1)
A perfect snapshot of the horror of everyday life. I love how you shared an ordinary moment, magnified to reveal the current of anxiety beneath the surface. A great piece. 👏👏👏☕