How to Induce Awe in an Ordinary Room
Field research in a living room

To begin, you will need:
one room, preferably one routinely overlooked
and one humble body willing to remain regardless.
*
Close the door, but do not lock it.
Awe dislikes absolute confinement.
*
Turn off the overhead light, and leave the smallest lamp burning instead.
Watch how the shadows begin to negotiate with one another for position.
*
Place an aging chair in the center of the room and apologize to it.
Well-used furniture remembers every version of you that once sat there.
*
Lie down prostrate on the floor.
Lower your perspective until the table legs resemble pillars. (No. Lower.)
*
Now remove the ceiling. Carefully.
Set it gently aside, taking care not to chip it.
*
If this proves difficult, imagine it thinning like mist until you can lift it.
Imagine the aging plaster dissolving into pure altitude.
*
Hold your breath for exactly the length of one forgotten year.
Release it slowly and deliberately.
*
Notice the dust rehearsing constellations.
Observe how the air thickens when you truly pay attention to the currents it follows.
*
Say the room’s true name aloud. Say it backward if you can do so without making mistakes.
If you do not know it, invent one.
*
Wait patiently.
Eventually, the walls will lean closer and start to breathe. Shallowly.
*
When the ceiling settles back into place,
sincerely thank the beams for standing in for the sky.
*
Leave the door unlocked
before slipping away quietly.
About the Creator
Shannon Hilson
Pro copywriter chasing wonder, weirdness, and the stories that won’t leave me alone. Fiction, poetry, and reflections live here.
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