Terrance Blip was a man of modest ambitions: toast with the perfect butter-to-crisp ratio, socks without holes, and a bank account that didn’t judge him every time he opened his finance app. He lived alone in a studio apartment sandwiched between a psychic who only predicted Tuesdays and a taxidermist who specialized in emotionally distressed rodents.
One evening, while trying to return a cursed air fryer he had impulse-bought during a depressive episode, Terrance tripped over a knockoff lava lamp at a garage sale. It shattered with a melodramatic poof and out came a genie wearing aviators, a Hawaiian shirt, and the resigned aura of someone who’d been summoned during Love Island reruns.
“Congratulations,” said the genie, sipping a LaCroix. “You get one wish. Not three. That’s a myth. Union rules.”
Terrance blinked. “One? That’s not very—”
“Choose wisely or stupidly,” the genie interrupted. “I grant both with equal enthusiasm.”
Terrance, who had been recently charged $4.99 to cancel a free trial, didn’t hesitate.
“I wish that every cent I’ve ever spent in my entire life suddenly reappears in my bank account.”
The genie raised a suspicious eyebrow, which somehow hovered three inches off his face. “You sure? No ‘make me happy’ or ‘stop climate change’ or ‘bring back dinosaurs but they’re chill this time’?”
“Nope. I want my money back. Every dollar. From diapers to drinks. Give it all to Future Me.”
The genie snapped his fingers with a bored sigh. “Done. Good luck, champ.”
At first, it was glorious. Terrance’s phone dinged. His bank app went from $3.87 to $1,042,335.72.
He screamed. He danced. He Venmoed a random stranger $12 just because he could. He ordered eight pizzas, six of which he threw out because they “looked judgmental.”
But by day three, things took a turn. Terrance received a letter from the IRS, handwritten in crayon and lightly singed. It simply read: “WHERE DID THIS MONEY COME FROM, TERRY?”
He shrugged it off—what could they do? He had a genie-backed balance.
But then his body started reacting strangely. He gained weight from meals he hadn’t eaten in years. He suffered recurring stomachaches from a Taco Bell binge in 2012. He began waking up with hangovers from drinks he hadn’t consumed since college, including the infamous Flaming Banshee Night.
By week two, he was pelted by karmic echoes of every regrettable purchase he’d ever made. An army of chia pets stormed his living room. The haunted Beanie Baby he bought in ’98 hissed “capitalist pig” in Latin. A 6-foot stack of receipts materialized and cornered him in the shower, demanding he relive each transaction line by line.
Even worse, people from his past began showing up. A barista from 2007 wanted her tip back. A woman he’d ghosted after paying for dinner appeared, holding a menu and muttering, “You owe me appetizers and closure.”
His bank account remained fat, but Terrance was broke in every other sense—emotionally, spiritually, gastrointestinally.
Desperate, he sought out the genie again, only to find him running a kombucha stand in a strip mall.
“You didn’t read the fine print,” the genie said, sipping his own brand called “Soul Rot.” “You got all the money back. But you also got the consequences. Consumption is a ritual. You broke the cycle.”
“Fix it,” Terrance begged. “I’ll wish for anything. Just make it stop.”
“Nope,” said the genie, smiling serenely. “Only one wish per customer. Union rules.”
And with that, the genie vanished in a puff of oat milk vapor.
Terrance now lives under a mountain of refunded guilt, knee-deep in cursed yoga mats and artisanal regret. His bank account remains full, but he spends nothing—terrified that each swipe might unleash another receipt demon or childhood Happy Meal toy with unresolved trauma.
He’s learned a powerful lesson: Sometimes, the cost of getting your money back… is everything you paid to forget.
Genius … enjoyed every word. Truly brilliant.
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Thank you, Euni. Your encouragement means the world.
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Greunie took the words right off of my keyboard!
You just get better and better…
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Thank you, Boots! Hopefully one day I’ll be good enough to write a whole book.
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