The sock woke up alone,
which felt dramatic enough
to justify an existential crisis
before breakfast.
It wasn’t just the emptiness beside it –
it was the haunting suspicion
that its partner had been swept away
by a more glamorous spin cycle.
Some say love is eternal,
but the sock knew better:
all it takes is one distracted human
and a washing machine
with a taste for tragedy.
It tried to stay strong,
but every time the drawer opened,
it felt the cold draft of betrayal.
Was it abandoned
for a newer, softer model?
One of those smug ankle socks
that think they’re better
just because they go to the gym?
Or worse –
had its partner eloped
with a towel,
seeking a life of luxury
and warm radiators?
The sock sighed dramatically,
the way only a sock can,
folding in on itself
like a tragic poet
who knows
that no one understands
the depth of cotton‑woven sorrow.
Just when the sock
was ready to accept
its tragic destiny
as a misunderstood symbol
of cosmic loneliness,
a faint rustle
came from the bed.
Not the poetic kind –
more like the sound
of someone trying to escape
a cotton‑based avalanche.
The sock froze,
half‑hopeful,
half‑convinced
it was finally losing
the last thread of sanity.
It rolled in like a clumsy champion,
its threads rumpled, its colors slightly embarrassed,
tripping over a rogue slipper,
dodging the fallen Lego of doom,
and landed beside its partner with a triumphant flop.
No words were exchanged,
just a silent, cottony gaze
that said clearly:
“I survived the spin cycle… and so did you.”
The reunion was not elegant –
no orchestral swell,
no slow‑motion embrace,
just two slightly mismatched socks
trying to look casual
after an undeniably dramatic morning.
The drawer watched in silence,
pretending not to notice
how they leaned into each other
like survivors of a very small,
very domestic apocalypse.
And somewhere deep inside the wardrobe,
a jealous scarf whispered,
“Amateurs. Try losing both ends
and see how you cope.”