when I was growing up,
our hallway had the most peculiar floor:
not quite carpet,
not quite planks,
but something in between.
like a wicker basket
stretched out over several metres,
or the rope you find
dangling off a dinghy's mooring,
it scratched and screened
at the soles of your feet,
tickling and tormenting
bare toes or
pulling the threads out of
well-meaning pairs of socks.
I hated it, or at least,
I thought I did —
until the day it was replaced by
laminate panels.
fake wood didn't cut it,
neither would expensive pile,
or any scraggly synthetic offering
to do the trick.
our painful, hessian homecoming
was a path to beds, and tables,
and welcoming arms.
it marked a definite departure
from sensible carpets and
suitable floors,
to the place between comforts.
for who would dally in a hallway that hurt?
or who would pause to feel the prickling,
pinching of strange interior decor?
of course, sense prevailed —
wood would come,
wood would stay,
and our peculiar, prickly past,
would become a story for some other day.