Walls are both physical and invisible. The most effective walls are the walls that
exist in the individual’s mind. The
construction of walls in the individual’s are developed over a lifetime and can
be modified as surroundings, situations and time change. The presence of physical walls has an effect
on the “mental walls.”
The material of a physical wall can help control the mental
wall. A wall constructed of sturdy
materials such as concrete and masonry can create a mental wall of security and
strength. A physical wall with materials
that are more transparent can create mental walls of welcoming and
openness. Not only do the materials of
physical walls affect the mental wall’s development, the locations of the walls
can have an equal effect as well.
The location of the physical walls within a building can dictate
how an individual moves through the building.
With the combination of materials of physical walls and where they are
placed, it could be possible to change and even control how the construction of
the mental wall progresses.
Since the development of the mental walls begin way early in
life, it is important to consider where that development takes place. The same way that the materials of a physical
wall can effect the mental wall so can the geographical area of where the
mental wall is being developed. Someone
who grows up in a small town or out in the country may be more likely to just
wander or create their own paths as they go, where someone from a city could be
more accustomed to following the provided paths. With the development of the mental walls the
location can also limits based on the surroundings that particular location has
to offer. Being able to create an
environment that has diverse surroundings and with the use of correctly placed
physical walls and proper materials, the mental walls can be further developed.
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