As a boy, I never really met the people who lived on our apartment floor. I would occasionally hear their doors close with an empty metallic clang, and locks turn behind them. If we did see them while waiting for the elevator, few words were spoken and eyes were averted. I was always bewildered by this willful avoidance and finally concluded that it must have been a defense against the crush of so many people crowded together.

— Douglas Abrams in The Book of Joy, Avery, Ch. Loneliness: No Need for Introduction, p. 125-126, 2016