The walls have a curious tendency to shatter, particularly when forgotten. In our modern age, it's a common mistake to think of the walls as static entities—ever the same, ever present. Yet, one must remember that walls are merely glimpses of architectural mischief, fashioned to confine but often forgotten by their creators^2.
To see a world in a wall, as if a wall could be more than a wall, is to wander the alleyways of abstract ambition.
Mansard Trewl, in his riveting essay, elucidates the psychological effects of prolonged wall contact. Walls, he argues, are like silent confidants, absorbing our whispers and forgotten secrets. Therefore, by merely leaning against one, you may unwittingly divulge the future's most intimate mysteries to a lump of ingratitude disguised as brick^3.
1. Trewl, Mansard. "The Shivering Lamentations of Concrete" (Vol. 2, 1531-1531).
2. Plank, Ivor. "Existentialism in Three Dimensions" (2065, New Realm Publishing).
3. Ibid., 1529.