Buildings have a language, bricks laid with weathered hands that once bake bread in their Grandmother's kitchen, new face wrinkled with kindness and years,
the stones have stories of wars, battles fought with swords, blood blooming from chests like flowers that have been tendered with careful green fingers,
walls rattle with memories. whispers of forgotten love that raged like wildfire for a year, then died like summer when autumn came and swept away it's leaves in a red carpet of indifference,
we cannot simply tear them down, these bricks, these stones, these walls, turn them into dust and blow them into the sky, for then to catch on clouds before scattering like ashes into the ether
we must love them, keep them, treasure each crack, each nook and cranny,
as if our lives, too, are the very foundations of castles