In a kitchen, someone cracks open a jar and gently lowers a raw egg into white vinegar until it's fully covered. The jar is sealed and left on a shelf.
At first, tiny bubbles rise around the egg with a soft fizz. The shell stays solid white, looking untouched.
The first day passes. The jar looks the same. The egg shows no sign of change.
A second day goes by without anything new to see. The setup remains quiet and ordinary.
By the third day, the view inside the jar has shifted. The hard shell is gone, replaced by a soft, bouncy membrane holding the egg together. The yolk and white show through clearly.
The egg's new form emerged after days of stillness. Time carried the effect from the simple placement to this visible shift.
