In her essay “The History of Scaffolding,” Lisa Robertson writes:
We believe that the object of architecture is to give happiness. For us this would mean the return of entropy and dissolution to the ephemeral. The architecture of happiness would rehearse a desanctification of time, which is itself only a scaffolding. We live on in this temporary framework of platforms and poles, as diagrammed in the most rudimentary fashion by the letter “t.” All the ceremonies of transition take place on such makeshift plankings: judgements, executions, banquets and symposia, entertainments and recitals, markets and bazaars, funerals, births and weddings and illicit fuckings are rehearsed and performed to their witnesses on this transient stage, which is sometimes decorated with drapes or swags or flags or garland, sometimes padded for the comfort of the performing body, sometimes left bare as if to state the plain facts of life. The scaffold is a pause, an inflection of passage. It accommodates us in a shivering.
Erect a scaffold platform of some kind and write the “ceremony of transition” that takes place on it. If you want, write that ceremony as an account given by a witness of it. If you want, give it the cadence and mood of a bedtime story, or perhaps a tacit warning to the listener. Or maybe make the speaker a terrible liar.