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This morning, I saw a squirrel trying to scale a wall of my house.
Salamanders, too, love to climb
the walls as they scamper after tiny flies.
The walls that link together to house something form the embracing arms of
security. A wall that stands alone, however, arouses curiosity. Do you ever look
at a wall and wonder what is hiding behind it?
Robert Frost said in the "The Mending Wall":
“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall...”
"Before I built a wall I’d ask to know
What was I walling in or walling out
And to whom I was like to give offense..."
Walls have had an immense influence on mankind since the dawn of
civilization. The first walls were the cave walls. Man left his first traces of
existence on the cave walls as the first hint of his soul and imagination, since
he created art despite his new and unfamiliar status on the planet earth.
Ever since, the walls have become mankind’s showcase. Man has made his
walls out of a myriad of materials: wood like knotty pine, teak, cherry,
mahogany, oak, sticks, tree trunks or logs, dry stone, cement, brick, glass,
metal, plastic, hay, flesh, suspicion or sensitivity.
He has filled these walls or left them hollowed. Then, he has painted the
walls drab gray or in all colors or whitewashed them. Sometimes has kept them in
their natural tones; he has wall-papered them not only with paper but with
plastics and other invented materials; and he has paneled them with wood and
synthetic materials.
On top of these walls, he has hung tapestry, billboards, lamps, neon lights,
flower boxes, paintings, mirrors, signs, inscriptions, advertisements,
manifestos, photos, writing, and even poetry.
Then, after ivy climbed the walls of some of his schools, the man has made
those schools above and beyond the reach of others, calling them Ivy League
Schools.
As if all this wasn’t enough, man has invited the wall both in concept and
expression into his language. Man walls in his feelings, walls out the unwanted,
and stonewalls someone else’s offer of progress. He keeps four walls around
himself, and when this becomes too much to handle for him, he climbs the walls,
making off-the-wall comments. When he can’t proceed or his mind is blocked, he
runs into a wall. He smirks at girls who are wallflowers standing on
wall-to-wall carpeting. If he is too drunk or gets an ophthalmologic illness, he
becomes walleyed.
Man has given the name "wall" to natural structures and phenomena
like the canyon walls, sea walls, the eye wall inside a hurricane, walls of
time, the cell walls inside his body, and many other things in his universe.
Sometimes man’s imagination and extra sensory perception take over for him
to see apparitions drift through the walls. For possibly the similar reason,
when he is afraid to tell his secrets, he’ll whisper to say, "the walls
have ears," personifying the walls. He even gives four walls to his Pandora’s
Box. Then, as a masochist, he opens that box.
Occasionally, man reveres what a wall represents, as in the case of the
Wailing Wall in Jerusalem and the black granite wall of Vietnam War Memorial.
Sometimes, man brings down a wall constructed for one reason when its purpose
has run out of fashion or it doesn’t serve his purposes anymore such as the
Berlin Wall. Some nasty walls like prison walls are visible. Others may be
invisible, but their malicious effects are felt deeply inside the humanity's
psyche like the Iron Curtain, the Walls of Prejudice or Bias, Walls of Revenge,
and Walls of Anger.
Man attaches walls to everything in his life. He is the mason who builds the
walls, only to protest and whine about them. Then, he tries to break through
these walls or to bring them down, and for that, he spends more effort than
erecting them.
This getting rid of the walls business has to be carried out with caution,
without banging into walls, hurting oneself, or hurting anyone who is walled in
by one thing or another. Especially in the case of an inner child who is trapped
inside the man’s being, one has to break down the walls gently but with firm
hands, since inner children are especially sensitive.
So, why does man build a wall? Probably, to challenge himself, since
challenges employ and entertain. If only man wouldn't scrape his skin while
climbing or breaking through!
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| Source:
Joy Cagil is an author on a site for Writing.Com. Her education is in
foreign languages and linguistics. In her background are varied subjects
such as psychology, humanities, mental health, women's issues, and visual
arts. Her portfolio can be found at http://www.Writing.Com/authors/joycag |
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