I was walking my puppy at 1:30 AM, and once we got home, I pulled this out of his mouth. What is it?

In the harsh hallway light, the terror slowly dissolves into something else: recognition and a strange, quiet sadness. That “thing” isn’t a creature or some unspeakable horror—it’s the remains of a teddy bear, once loved by someone, now dragged out of the shadows by an overexcited puppy. The “tail” is just stuffing, the dark part a soaked, ruined patch of fabric, twisted by dirt and imagination into something far more sinister than it is.

Moments like this remind us how easily our minds fill in the dark with monsters. Your puppy, meanwhile, is just thrilled with a new treasure, blissfully unaware of the fright it caused. You toss the soggy toy, give a relieved laugh, and maybe an extra cuddle. By morning, the whole thing feels almost funny—another story of how the night turns ordinary things into ghosts.