My Pipes | Unclog

We know this feeling because we live it daily, not in our walls but in our veins. The body is the first pipe. A headache behind the eyes, constipation that turns the bathroom into a negotiation, a throat so tight with unspoken grief that swallowing becomes a deliberate act. We ignore these signals until they scream. “Unclog my pipes” then becomes a medical whisper: drink water, walk, stretch, cry. The body, that faithful servant, only rebels when we have refused to let things pass. Every cramp is a memo. Every sigh of relief after a good bowel movement is a small resurrection.

There is a social dimension too. Families, workplaces, nations—all are systems of pipes. Information that should flow gets trapped by hierarchy. Kindness that should circulate gets blocked by pride. A family that never speaks of its founding wound is a kitchen sink full of gray water. A company where bad news travels upward like molasses is a toilet about to overflow. The health of any collective can be measured by the ease with which things pass: praise, complaint, idea, apology. When a society’s pipes are clogged, the result is not a leak but an explosion. unclog my pipes

So how do we do it? The methods are humble. A plunger of honest conversation. A drain snake of daily routine. The boiling water of a long walk. The baking soda and vinegar of laughter with a friend. Sometimes, we need a professional: a therapist, a doctor, a spiritual director—the plumber who has seen worse and isn’t afraid to get their hands dirty. But mostly, unclogging is a practice of attention. You notice the water rising. You stop pretending it isn’t there. You reach for the tool, or you call for help. We know this feeling because we live it

The final paradox is this: the goal is not a permanent state of clarity. Pipes clog again. That is their nature. The art is not in achieving perfect flow but in developing a loving relationship with the blockages. Each clog is a teacher. It shows you where you have stopped moving, where you have hoarded instead of released, where fear has hardened into sediment. To say “unclog my pipes” is to acknowledge that you are, at this moment, a little stuck. And then to say it again tomorrow, and the day after, until the saying becomes a rhythm rather than a cry. We ignore these signals until they scream

But the clogs run deeper. The mind is a labyrinth of pipes, and we are poor janitors. An idea half-formed, a grudge replayed for years, a worry that loops like a corrupted record—these are mental blockages. We try to force clarity through willpower, only to find the drain backing up with more anxiety. The philosopher Henri Bergson spoke of durée , the continuous flow of lived time. When we obsess over the past or fear the future, we stop that flow. We become a still pond, and still ponds breed algae. To unclog the mind’s pipes is to practice a radical letting-go: meditation, confession, the simple act of writing down the tangled knot and watching it untwist on the page.

The heart, of course, is the most delicate pipe of all. It is designed to receive and release, to take in love and let out gratitude, to swell with joy and drain sorrow through tears. But we learn to clamp it shut. A childhood disappointment teaches us not to trust. A betrayal hardens into a calcified lump of resentment. We say “I’m fine” when we are drowning. The heart’s blockage is invisible, but its symptoms are not: the inability to apologize, the reflexive sarcasm, the loneliness that persists in a crowded room. To say “unclog my pipes” from the heart is to admit that we have been holding back the flood for too long. It means risking the mess of release—the ugly cry, the awkward conversation, the forgiveness that feels like swallowing glass.