Adronitis

Adronitis

n.
frustration with how long it takes to get to know someone—spending the first few weeks chatting in their psychological entryway, with each subsequent conversation like entering a different anteroom, each a little closer to the center of the house—wishing instead that you could start there and work your way out, exchanging your deepest secrets first, before easing into casualness, until you’ve built up enough mystery over the years to ask them where they’re from and what they do for a living.

In Ancient Roman architecture, an andronitis is a hallway connecting the front part of the house with a complex inner atrium. One quirk of Roman houses is that all the rooms in the front have Greek names, but all the back rooms are in Latin—as if your outer self and your inner self are speaking in completely different languages. Pronounced “ad-roh-nahy-tis.”

Anaphasia

Ludiosis

Pax Latrina

Burn Upon Reentry

Adronitis

Catoptric Tristesse

Pâro

Kinchy

Scrough

a person working on the sidewalk

Heartmoor

a campfire with a kettle many small logs

Xeno

Rasque

close-up of the shards of a broken vase

Star-Stuck

a man walking towards a door with a large question mark

Ringlorn

Volander

Archimony

a person looking at broken furniture

Skidding

Heartspur

Keir

a snowy landscape with trees and a fence

Mottleheaded