The middle of the hallway
how a house forgets who lives inside it

Where is my coat? I left it
slung over the banister, I think,
but when I reach for it, there is only the memories
of other winters, other sleeves.
I am cold. And my breath
curls like a dragons,
as if my body is answering to things my mother once asked
I thought the house would keep me
walls lined with photographs,
the smell of Pine-Sol,
voices soft and irritated in the next room.
But that was a trick.
The house has no loyalty.
Its floorboards reject anyone.
Its pipes sing the same complaint
whether I am here or not.
I tell myself I’m leaving,
but every time I open the door
the air feels like an accusation.
The neighbor’s dog stares with eyes
too human, wet with knowledge
I’m not allowed to know.
So, I linger—mid-step, mid-thought—
touching the nail in the wall
where a calendar once hung,
studying the indentation
of furniture long gone.
It is easier to talk to absences.
They never interrupt.
They never correct.
What am I waiting for?
Not the coat. Not warmth.
Maybe just the moment
the house admits it never loved me,
that it let me wander its halls
for years only because
I was too quiet to spit out.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Bloodroot and Coal Dust, his latest book.



Comments (3)
WOW! 😱 Sensational work! You have been flame-broiling this challenge Tim! BRAVO! 💪🏾🎉
"It is easier to talk to absences. They never interrupt. They never correct." Those lines were so deep. Loved your poem!
It's interesting to think that we can love a place and spend so much time there but walls can never really love us back. Excellent poem.