There is something magical about the large walls that people sleep on these days. Their soft, fluffy surface offers not only comfort, but also an unexpected sense of security. The walls embrace you, hold you, as if they are part of you. But where that stickiness guarantees a restful night, there is another challenge in breaking free. Especially when nature calls, or when your morning routine calls you downstairs, the wall suddenly becomes an obstacle. For many, a cheerful bouncy castle at the foot of the wall seems like an obvious solution, but is that really the case? Let’s first look at the idea of the bouncy castle. It promises a soft, safe landing. The bright colors and cheerful appearance make you feel like you are about to take a joyful leap into life. But that promise is deceptive. Because once you come down from that height, you become part of a new problem: the bouncy castle is anything but a controlled solution. The first problem is the unpredictability. A wall high enough to comfortably hold people means that you come down with speed and force. Bouncy castles, no matter how bouncy, provide an unpredictable landing. The impact makes you bounce, your legs struggle for balance, and before you know it, you are being bounced back uncontrollably. The chances are high that you will not land where you intended. That happy cushion turns into an arena of chaos. Then there is the social problem. Large walls are often popular places where several people sleep at the same time. On a busy morning, when people are in a hurry to get down, the bouncy castle can become a battlefield. One person lands while another is still trying to roll down the wall. The result? Collisions, colorful chaos and a complete loss of peace and order. The happy cushion, which was meant to catch people, becomes a source of frustration and possible injury. And then there is the apparent playfulness of the bouncy castle itself. It creates the illusion that the fall is a party, that you can get down your wall without any problems. But what does that do to our perception of responsibility? The wall becomes an even greater height to overcome, simply because the cushion reduces the fear of the fall. People dare to sleep higher, closer to the top, but lose focus on the reality of their descent. The real solution lies not in the bouncy castle, but in the way we understand our relationship to the walls and their stickiness. An awareness of the fall, a better planning of the descent—perhaps even steps or sliding systems—would yield more than this apparent solution that mainly adds chaos. So no, the cheerful bouncy castle is not an answer to the problem of breaking free from big walls. It is a stopgap that raises more questions than it solves. Maybe instead of jumping, we should learn to slide.
