Poets logo

Splinter Removal

The dangers of sitting on wooden stages

By Rachel DeemingPublished 2 years ago 2 min read
Splinter Removal
Photo by Ning Shi on Unsplash

Teacher with tweezers:

"Stand on that chair in the light."

Painful splinters out.

I wrote yesterday about an embarrassing incident involving skiers for this challenge which you can read here:

Today, let's us head back into the archives to childhood incidents where I have experienced the harrowing delights of embarrassment: harrowing, because they are excruciating to remember but delights because you can then use them as sources of inspiration and craft them into writing nuggets to delight (you hope) your readers.

In my primary school, the stage in our main hall was a portable affair, made up of boxes of wood which could be moved around to extend its size or, for productions, to landscape the performance area. Sometimes, during assemblies, we would be made to sit on the stage and on one such occasion, and I can't remember the exact one, I was sitting on the stage. It was not the most comfortable and I was wearing something made of thin material, a light summer dress, I think, and whilst shifting my buttocks to try and find a better position where pins and needles were held off during their continued assault to ensure my bum went completely numb, I must have inadvertently managed to pick up some stray wood fibres of the sharp and invasive variety - splinters.

They couldn't stay in and to be honest, once I'd got off that stage, I couldn't sit down again in class and so, the only course of action was to get them out.

My teacher did so by getting me to stand on a chair in the school hall, which is the only exclusively unused place in a small rural primary school as she proceeded to prise them out with a tweezers. Why the chair? She was a tall woman and needed my bottom to be at eye level. It must have been easier than laying me out although I will never forget the face of the person in the corridor outside, that I saw heading to the girls' toilets through the glass pane in the double doored entryway at the sight of me with my skirt pulled up, having a teacher scrutinising my bum cheeks. A mixture of horror and humour as well as knowledge that this would be a great piece of news to the rest of the school at break time travelled across her face all at the same time and I can remember the warmth which I felt in my cheeks, those on my face, at being seen in such an ignominious position.

Oh, the shame. Luckily, no lasting damage was caused to my posterior although it is not something that is easily forgotten.

I am very wary around wood now.

humor

About the Creator

Rachel Deeming

Storyteller. Poet. Reviewer. Traveller.

I love to write. Check me out in the many places where I pop up:

Medium

My blog

Reedsy

Linkedin

Goodreads

X

Facebook

Beware of imitators.

Reader insights

Nice work

Very well written. Keep up the good work!

Add your insights

Comments (6)

Sign in to comment
  • Dharrsheena Raja Segarran2 years ago

    Oh my goodness! That was have been so painful. Not to mention embarrassing as well. I've had splinters before but on my hands. Despite it being a shameful experience, I'm so glad she got the splinter out for you!

  • Jay Kantor2 years ago

    Dear Rachel ~ Your stories always bring out memories for me - May I: Twin & I played in the lot next door and we'd stand in line afterwards for 'splinter patrol-puller,' Vicky Lynn the self appointed responsibility of a Big-Sis. As you say - you never know what a readers going to 'Pull-Out' of an article - Now Grit-your-Teeth and don't Move - Jay in L.A.

  • Mariann Carroll2 years ago

    That was a relief 😮‍💨

  • Hannah Moore2 years ago

    Fantastic story - it really wasnt clear from the senryu that this was a buttock related situation though!

  • Arslan2 years ago

    extraordinary

  • Oh the shame haha. Good story. Next time there's a "most embarrassing" story prompt, this is a good one!

Find us on social media

Miscellaneous links

  • Explore
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Support

© 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.