You are sitting at a wooden table in a dimly lit ramen shop, the kind where the steam from the kitchen coats the windows in a thin veil of anonymity. The 300-millimeter stainless steel chopsticks from a Kyoto street market feel heavy and balanced in your right hand as you prepare to lift a soft-boiled egg from the broth.
It is a moment of hard-earned peace, a quiet pause in a week that has felt like a marathon run through deep sand. Then, the black glass slab of your smartphone vibrates against the scarred oak of the table. The screen illuminates, displaying a notification that claims your primary financial account has been accessed from an unrecognized device in a different hemisphere.
Your heart rate spikes instantly: the physical sensation of adrenaline is a cold current running from the base of your skull down to your fingertips.
The message demands that you click a link within the next to verify your identity or face a permanent suspension of services. Your chopsticks remain suspended mid-air as your brain shifts from the sensory pleasure of dinner to a state of high-alert survival.
In that split second, the logic of the world narrows down to a single, urgent point of failure. You feel the crushing weight of a digital ultimatum, and your thumb begins to move toward the glowing glass