Because here is the secret the plumbers know and the poets forget: Evidence that you have been here, living in this body, shedding its proof, trying and failing to wash it all away. The drain is not a garbage disposal for the soul. It is a threshold. And thresholds, left untended, will always fill with the quiet weight of what we refuse to release.
You are not just unclogging a pipe. You are performing an archaeology of avoidance. unclog bath tub
You watch it go. And you feel something absurdly close to redemption. Because here is the secret the plumbers know
And that, if you let it be, is holy.
So you clean the tool. You wipe the rim. You run fresh, scalding water through the pipe—a baptism for the newly opened channel. Tomorrow, the drain will slow again. Next month, you will kneel once more with your wire hanger and your reluctant courage. That is not a curse. That is a rhythm. Maintenance as meditation. And thresholds, left untended, will always fill with
You sigh. You roll up your sleeve. Armed with a wire hanger, straightened into a tool of reluctant salvation, you kneel before the porcelain altar. This is not glamorous work. There is no poetry in the first blind stab. The metal scrapes against the curved throat of the drain, and for a moment you are just a primate poking a hole with a stick. But then—something gives. A wet, organic resistance. You hook it. You pull.