Cold And Clogged Ears 【INSTANT ◎】
That night, as he drifted off, he felt one ear give a final, tiny pop . The rain came rushing back in a soft roar. He smiled into the dark, grateful for the sound, but oddly grateful for the silence, too.
Then, with a soft, sinking sigh, they clogged again. The world went back to velvet.
They were clogged.
When his partner, Sam, came home, they didn’t say a word. Sam just looked at Leo’s pathetic, flushed face, put a cool hand on his forehead, and smiled. Leo couldn’t hear the smile, but he could see it—the crinkle of the eyes, the tilt of the head. Sam sat beside him, and they watched the rain together in the muffled, underwater quiet.
Around noon, he tried the old trick: pinching his nose and gently blowing. His ears gave a tiny, reluctant pop , and for one glorious second, the world rushed in. The hum of the refrigerator. The drip of the faucet. The patter of rain against the window like a thousand tiny fingers. He gasped at the fullness of it, the sudden noisiness of being alive. cold and clogged ears
By evening, a strange peace settled over him. In the silence, his thoughts seemed louder. He noticed the grain of the wooden floor. He watched a spider repair its web on the porch, a silent architect at work. He realized that sound was not the only language of the world. There was also the weight of the cold blanket, the sting of vapor rub on his chest, the slow, patient dance of steam rising from his soup.
And Leo realized: being sick, with clogged ears and a heavy cold, was like living in a snow globe. The world was still beautiful. You just had to lean closer to see it. That night, as he drifted off, he felt
Not with wax or water, but with that thick, pressurized silence that only a brutal cold can bring. When he sat up, he heard his own pulse as a muffled thump-thump behind his eardrums. The birds outside his window sang into a void. His morning coffee didn’t sizzle when it hit the hot pan; it merely sssked —a whisper of a sound, quickly swallowed.
