Unclog Bath - Tub
It is your own history, braided into a dark rope. A slurry of hair and scum and something that might once have been a cotton ball. It smells like a basement memory. It is repulsive. It is also, unmistakably, you. Every shower you rushed through to get to work. Every bath you took with a book and a glass of wine, pretending the world wasn't burning. Every time you let the dirt circle the drain instead of facing the quiet grief sitting on your chest.
Every bath is a ritual of erasure. You step in to wash away the grit of the sidewalk, the weight of a conversation that curdled at 2:00 PM, the invisible film of anxiety that sticks to your shoulders like a second shroud. You pour lavender and Epsom salts, you light a candle, you lean back. But the water does not lie. While you have been trying to purify the surface, something beneath has been collecting: the long hairs shed during seasons of stress, the congealed oils of comfort food, the fine silt of dead skin cells you forgot you were losing. unclog bath tub
The water stands still. It does not swirl, does not sing its usual centrifugal hymn as it spirals toward the unknown. Instead, it sits—a grey, tepid mirror holding the ghosts of soap, skin, and silence. You have been here before. The bath, once a sanctuary of heat and salt and solitude, has become a still life of domestic failure. It is your own history, braided into a dark rope
And that, if you let it be, is holy.
You are not just unclogging a pipe. You are performing an archaeology of avoidance. It is repulsive