I held it up to the light, my mind racing through every horror story I’d ever heard about food. It was pale, stretchy, almost like a tiny alien had snuck into our dinner. For a moment, I was sure I’d found something dangerous, something that didn’t belong anywhere near a plate, let alone my mouth. The more I stared, the more unsettling it seemed.
But as the panic slowly faded, logic stepped in. I compared it to the rest of the pork, noticed how it connected along the grain, how it matched the structure of the meat. Piece by piece, it made sense: it was just a tendon, a strip of connective tissue that sometimes stays in even when the meat is well prepared. Nothing alive. Nothing sinister. Just a very ordinary part of the animal that gave me an unforgettable scare.
