The flag was there the whole time.
You walked past it, set down your towel, and marched straight into the surf… never knowing what it really meant. Lifeguards know. Locals know. Parents who’ve done the ER run with a screaming, stung child definitely know. That strange purple square snapping in the wind is not decoration. It’s a warni… Continues…
Most of us think we understand the beach: green is safe, yellow is caution, red is danger. But the purple flag is different. It doesn’t warn you about towering waves or violent riptides; it warns you about what you can’t see. Jellyfish drifting like invisible landmines. Stingrays half-buried in the sand. Creatures with spines, barbs, and stingers simply existing where we’ve decided to play.
That’s what makes the purple flag strangely humbling. The ocean isn’t a chlorinated pool rented for the afternoon; it’s a living, pulsing ecosystem that tolerates us as visitors. A purple flag doesn’t mean panic, it means respect. You can still wade in, still float and splash and laugh—but you do it with your eyes open, understanding you’re not alone out there. Next time that small violet square flutters above the lifeguard stand, don’t shrug it off. Nod back. It’s the sea, quietly telling you the truth.