I said, "Hey, you've worked in construction forever—what happens if you build a tower downwards instead of upwards?"
He responded, "Well, if you put it that way…"
I interrupted, "Thanks"
Joke Poo:
Title: The Depths of Design
I cornered my therapist after a session.
I said, “Hey, you’ve been analyzing my dreams for ages—what happens if instead of climbing out of a pit in my dreams, I just keep digging down?”
She responded, “Well, if you keep excavating…”
I interrupted, “Perfect, I’ll send the invoice for the consultation!”
Alright, let’s break down this joke and then build something new on top of it!
Joke Dissection:
- Setup: The setup creates an expectation of a technical or industry-specific answer about the physics or engineering challenges of building “downwards.”
- Punchline/Misdirection: The humor comes from the friend’s incredibly short response, “Well, if you put it that way…” which acknowledges the unusual framing of the question (building a tower downwards) instead of actually addressing the practicalities.
- Meta-humor: The interruption “Thanks” adds to the joke by subverting expectation of hearing out the reason why the framing is unusual.
Key Elements:
- Construction: Building, architecture, engineering.
- Direction: Up vs. Down – challenging the natural perception of how things are meant to be.
- Language/Communication: Wordplay, unusual question framing, and terse answers.
- Subversion of expectation: The expectation of a “real” answer is immediately shut down.
Comedic Enrichment – “Did You Know?” Observation:
Did you know that the deepest artificial hole in the world, the Kola Superdeep Borehole in Russia, is technically a tower built downwards? While it wasn’t intended as architecture, it did test the limits of what we can “build” in the opposite direction. Reaching a depth of over 7.5 miles, drilling it was so challenging they reportedly heard “screams” from the Earth… which, let’s be honest, is probably just the sound of the drill bit contemplating the existential horror of never seeing sunlight.
New Joke Inspired by the Original:
I asked an architect, “Hypothetically, if you were building a tower of paperwork instead of bricks, what’s the biggest risk?”
He started to explain, “Well, the structural integrity relies heavily on the-“
I interrupted, “What font are you using for the blueprints?”

