Why this word is great
FORWANDER — [Verb] To wander until weary or to cause someone to wander until weary. From Middle English forwandrien, marrying for- ("exhausting, thoroughly") with wander ("to roam"). Unlike "roam" (which implies leisurely drift, unburdened by fatigue) or "peregrinate" (which carries the weight of pilgrimage or deliberate travel), forwander is the act of walking oneself into exhaustion, a Sisyphean meandering. It is the aimless circuit of a lost traveler in an unfamiliar city, the slow, shuffling steps of a grief-stricken widow through empty rooms, or the ceaseless pacing of a caged animal—movement not as exploration, but as the wearing down of body and spirit, until even the act of standing feels like surrender.