I found this in a flooded ditch. I caught it and brought it home in a jar.

It wasn’t a parasite at all, but a Triops — a tiny crustacean often called a “living fossil.” Their lineage stretches back hundreds of millions of years, long before dinosaurs thundered across the planet. The creature I found in that shallow ditch was the descendant of ancient life that has somehow survived mass extinctions, climate shifts, and the complete reshaping of Earth.

Triops eggs can lie dormant in dry soil for years, waiting patiently for rain to return. A single storm fills a forgotten puddle, and suddenly these prehistoric beings awaken, swimming at our feet while we mistake them for something dangerous. Realizing that what I feared was actually a fragile relic of deep time changed the moment completely: from horror to quiet awe at how the past still surfaces in the smallest corners of our everyday world.