The small god of lost things conducting a very serious audit of the laundry basket.DOMESTIC ANNOINTING
Meaning rarely arrives with trumpets – sometimes it smells of eucalyptus and sits on your dirty laundry. Meet the small god of lost things and his cosmic audit.
The divine has a flair for drama, but not for location. Which is why, on a perfectly ordinary morning, a small god appeared in my laundry basket and behaved as if it were stepping onto a celestial stage. It puffed itself up, straightened what might have been a robe or might have been lint, and announced, with the gravity of a cosmic proclamation, “Prepare yourself. A great honour is about to be bestowed.”
It was the size of a guinea pig and shaped like a cloud that had recently been scolded. It radiated the confidence of someone convinced they are delivering news that will alter the trajectory of human civilisation. It cleared its throat, waiting for applause that did not come.
“You have been chosen as the patron saint of something extremely important.” It paused for effect. “Extremely.”
I braced myself for destiny. The god unfurled a scroll made of recycled shopping lists and read with ceremonial pomp. “Your sacred domain is The Lost Things That Turn Up Only After You Stop Looking For Them“.
It looked at me expectantly, as if I should fall to my knees in gratitude. My knees held their ground. The god continued anyway, swelling with pride. “This is a role of immense cosmic significance. Keys. Glasses. Remote controls. The occasional USB stick. You will oversee their reappearance with impeccable dramatic timing. The universe hinges on your compliance.”
I explained that I had not applied. The god waved this away with the benevolent impatience of a deity who has already decided you should be grateful. “Divinity is rarely merit based,” it said. “But rest assured, you were chosen for your… qualities.” It did not specify which ones.
It handed me a tiny clipboard with the solemnity of a knighthood. “Your first case arrives in three, two, one.” A file appeared. A man in Perth had lost his wallet and was blaming everyone except himself. The god nodded, satisfied. “See? Already the cosmos calls upon you.”
And that was that. A small god in a laundry basket had declared me essential to the functioning of reality. Not heroic. Not glamorous. But essential, apparently.
Meaning rarely arrives with trumpets. Sometimes it arrives smelling faintly of eucalyptus, sitting on your dirty laundry, convinced it is changing the fate of the universe.
Some people are born for greatness; I was clearly born for this specific brand of madness.
Harry is a satirist in remission who now moonlights as a metaphysical desk jockey. He specialises in cosmic admin, recursive nonsense, and the occasional algorithmic incident report. One poem he wrote still hasn’t stopped, and several readers claim it whispers back during thunderstorms.
The Small God in the Laundry Basket
Meaning rarely arrives with trumpets – sometimes it smells of eucalyptus and sits on your dirty laundry. Meet the small god of lost things and his cosmic audit.
The divine has a flair for drama, but not for location. Which is why, on a perfectly ordinary morning, a small god appeared in my laundry basket and behaved as if it were stepping onto a celestial stage. It puffed itself up, straightened what might have been a robe or might have been lint, and announced, with the gravity of a cosmic proclamation, “Prepare yourself. A great honour is about to be bestowed.”
It was the size of a guinea pig and shaped like a cloud that had recently been scolded. It radiated the confidence of someone convinced they are delivering news that will alter the trajectory of human civilisation. It cleared its throat, waiting for applause that did not come.
“You have been chosen as the patron saint of something extremely important.” It paused for effect. “Extremely.”
I braced myself for destiny. The god unfurled a scroll made of recycled shopping lists and read with ceremonial pomp. “Your sacred domain is The Lost Things That Turn Up Only After You Stop Looking For Them“.
It looked at me expectantly, as if I should fall to my knees in gratitude. My knees held their ground. The god continued anyway, swelling with pride. “This is a role of immense cosmic significance. Keys. Glasses. Remote controls. The occasional USB stick. You will oversee their reappearance with impeccable dramatic timing. The universe hinges on your compliance.”
I explained that I had not applied. The god waved this away with the benevolent impatience of a deity who has already decided you should be grateful. “Divinity is rarely merit based,” it said. “But rest assured, you were chosen for your… qualities.” It did not specify which ones.
It handed me a tiny clipboard with the solemnity of a knighthood. “Your first case arrives in three, two, one.” A file appeared. A man in Perth had lost his wallet and was blaming everyone except himself. The god nodded, satisfied. “See? Already the cosmos calls upon you.”
And that was that. A small god in a laundry basket had declared me essential to the functioning of reality. Not heroic. Not glamorous. But essential, apparently.
Meaning rarely arrives with trumpets. Sometimes it arrives smelling faintly of eucalyptus, sitting on your dirty laundry, convinced it is changing the fate of the universe.
Some people are born for greatness; I was clearly born for this specific brand of madness.
Harry is a satirist in remission who now moonlights as a metaphysical desk jockey. He specialises in cosmic admin, recursive nonsense, and the occasional algorithmic incident report. One poem he wrote still hasn’t stopped, and several readers claim it whispers back during thunderstorms.
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