Revertere ad locum tuum, an expression found on some cemetery facades, which translated from Latin means "return to your place," is the phrase that suggests the beginning of the work. On a wooden surface, there are 20 spaces for placing the letters, which are scattered on the floor and together complete the phrase. Each letter can only occupy one single space on the wooden surface. It is up to the public to experiment with fitting and placing them. As soon as all the letters are in their places and fully form the phrase REVERTERE AD LOCUM TUUM, they will fall to the ground, returning to their place, which makes whoever manipulates them make the same effort to put the letters back in place, thus embodying the myth of Sisyphus, in a circular, futile and tragic task, of someone who sees, in a few moments, not the stone, but their own existence slipping away.