Poetry
1 min
The Missing Red Sock
Jonjo West
It's like the missing red sock, the way something can suddenly be
absent from the "us" that binds you together. It's not that they
were expensive socks crucial to your relationship - actually just
attached to a gift of Christmas pajamas by one of those plastic,
stringy-type tags, an accidental smile or absentminded reach for
your hand. But feeling their softness and the way they hug your
feet, the way he would hold your head in his hands and whisper a
string of compliments, they became your favorites. But all too soon
one goes missing.
In spite of checking the laundry, checking the washing machine,
checking the dryer, checking the dog's toys, checking under the
bed, checking the trash, the sock remains absent. Platitudes abound
from friends about how it'll return again someday - their distant
spouses agree. And eventually you at least give the impression that
you agree as well. The remaining sock joins others of its kind in a
small pile in the closet. You stop thinking about those warm glances
full of love and desire, tell yourself you have plenty of other socks.
Days step into weeks into months with only an occasional pang in
your heart when your eyes happen to fall on the lonely red sock
living its solitudinous life. Then as the holidays again approach and
that hollow feeling on your heart has you especially chilled and
alone, you take out an old waffle weave, long sleeved sweater,
pulling it over your head, trying to pull on comfort from times lost.
The way your body begins to sweat is not the magical warmth you
coveted. Anxiety created from memories overheats your
companionless night.
Far from soothed, with a shower of static, you pull off the failed
woolen and it's there. Sticking to your heart is the red sock and the
hope for a return of the little things that make a pair of us.
absent from the "us" that binds you together. It's not that they
were expensive socks crucial to your relationship - actually just
attached to a gift of Christmas pajamas by one of those plastic,
stringy-type tags, an accidental smile or absentminded reach for
your hand. But feeling their softness and the way they hug your
feet, the way he would hold your head in his hands and whisper a
string of compliments, they became your favorites. But all too soon
one goes missing.
In spite of checking the laundry, checking the washing machine,
checking the dryer, checking the dog's toys, checking under the
bed, checking the trash, the sock remains absent. Platitudes abound
from friends about how it'll return again someday - their distant
spouses agree. And eventually you at least give the impression that
you agree as well. The remaining sock joins others of its kind in a
small pile in the closet. You stop thinking about those warm glances
full of love and desire, tell yourself you have plenty of other socks.
Days step into weeks into months with only an occasional pang in
your heart when your eyes happen to fall on the lonely red sock
living its solitudinous life. Then as the holidays again approach and
that hollow feeling on your heart has you especially chilled and
alone, you take out an old waffle weave, long sleeved sweater,
pulling it over your head, trying to pull on comfort from times lost.
The way your body begins to sweat is not the magical warmth you
coveted. Anxiety created from memories overheats your
companionless night.
Far from soothed, with a shower of static, you pull off the failed
woolen and it's there. Sticking to your heart is the red sock and the
hope for a return of the little things that make a pair of us.
A Bronco Story. Submissions are from the Western Michigan University community.
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