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When Your Living Situation Feels Like Another Brick in the Wall

There are times when home—supposed to be a place of comfort and freedom—starts to feel like a cage. The walls close in, routines feel robotic, and the people around you seem distant. If your living situation feels like another brick in the wall, you’re likely experiencing a sense of emotional detachment, isolation, or frustration rooted in your environment.

This phrase, borrowed from Pink Floyd’s famous critique of conformity, speaks to more than just bad roommates or a messy apartment. It reflects a deeper feeling: that your living space is no longer a sanctuary, but just another part of what’s weighing you down—another piece in a structure that’s limiting your growth, voice, or peace of mind.

Maybe it’s a roommate dynamic that lacks connection, a stressful household with no boundaries, or a space so tight and impersonal that it feels like you’re just going through the motions. Over time, that sense of numbness can build, brick by brick, until you’re emotionally walled off—both from others and yourself.

Recognizing this feeling is the first step. From there, it’s worth asking: Can things be improved through communication, boundaries, or a personal reset of your space? Or is it time to seek something new—a different environment that feels more like home and less like a trap?

Because in the end, no one should feel like their own home is just another brick in someone else’s wall.

Learn More: The Devil Went Down to Colorado

Pink Floyd