HONDA PILOT- NONAV 2012-2015 NAVIGATION GPS SYSTEM

My Tickle Apr 2026

We spend our entire lives trying to know our own bodies. We learn the map of scars, the tightness of hamstrings, the exact temperature of a morning shower. But there is one corner of that map that remains perpetually foreign to me. I call it my tickle .

It lives in specific coordinates: the arch of my left foot, the soft hollow just below my ribs, and the vulnerable nape of my neck. My tickle is a traitor. When touched by another hand, it bypasses my brain’s logic center entirely. It sends a lightning bolt straight to my diaphragm, forcing a giggle that sounds almost pained. “Stop,” I gasp, even as I laugh. “I mean it.”

What fascinates me—and unnerves me—is the paradox of the tickle. I cannot do it to myself. Try as I might to scrape my own foot or poke my own side, nothing happens. The sensation requires the other . It requires unpredictability. My tickle is proof that my body does not fully belong to me. It has its own alliances, its own sense of humor, its own vulnerability to the outside world. my tickle

And that, oddly, is the most comforting tickle of all.

As a child, my tickle was a torture device wielded by older cousins. As a teenager, it was a secret to hide on first dates. As an adult, it has become a strange litmus test for intimacy. To show someone where my tickle lives is to hand them a tiny, ridiculous weapon. It says: You can make me lose control. You can make me beg for mercy while smiling. We spend our entire lives trying to know our own bodies

So I have made peace with it. My tickle is not a flaw. It is a doorway. It is the quickest route from my guarded head to my helpless heart. And sometimes, on a quiet evening, when a trusted hand hovers near my ribs and I squeak before they even touch me, I realize: this ridiculous, uncontrollable shiver is just my body’s way of whispering, You are alive. You are here. And you are not in charge.

Some people hate their tickle. They train themselves to suppress it, to go rigid, to stare blankly. I have tried. I cannot. My tickle is honest in a way the rest of me rarely is. It does not negotiate. It does not perform dignity. It just reacts —a raw, prehistoric flinch that reminds me I am, beneath all the adult armor, just a bundle of nerves wrapped in skin. I call it my tickle

It is not a laugh. It is not joy. It is an involuntary coup.