I was just scrolling late at night when I saw it — a simple image floating across my screen with a bold claim: “Most People Are Narcissists… Count the squares.” It looked harmless, almost childish, but something about it pulled me in instantly. I told myself I’d glance at it for a second, count a few squares, and move on. But within minutes, I realized I was staring at it way too seriously, trying to figure out what I was missing while a strange thought crept in… what if this actually says something about me?
At first, the answer seemed obvious. I quickly counted the small squares, then the bigger ones I could easily see. I felt confident. Too confident. But then I saw the comments under the post — people arguing, throwing out completely different numbers, some laughing, others insisting that if you didn’t get the “right” answer, it meant something deeper about how your brain works. That’s when doubt hit. I went back, looked again, and suddenly I started noticing shapes I hadn’t seen before.
The more I stared, the more confusing it became. Squares inside squares. Overlapping lines forming shapes that didn’t stand out at first glance. My “easy” answer didn’t feel so certain anymore. I counted again. And again. Each time I got a different result. That’s when it clicked — this wasn’t just about counting. It was about perception. About how quickly we judge, how confident we are in what we see, and how easily our minds can overlook details right in front of us.
Some people rushed through it and stuck with their first answer. Others slowed down, questioned themselves, and kept digging until they were sure. And that’s where the real twist is. The puzzle quietly exposes something about how you approach problems — whether you react fast or think deeper, whether you trust your first instinct or challenge it. Not narcissism, not personality labels… just a subtle reflection of how your mind works under pressure.
And when I finally took a deep breath and counted carefully, piece by piece, I reached the answer that most people miss the first time: 40 squares. Not because it was hidden, but because it required patience to see the full picture. That’s the real lesson behind it — sometimes the truth isn’t what you see first… it’s what you’re willing to look for again.