It's fitting that one of my first posts on a blog about simplicity and the built environment would be about walking.
Yesterday I tweeted an article on walking by Antonio Malchik, The End of Walking. He talked about journalist and National Geographic fellow Paul Salopek's seven-year walking trip.
"His reasons for walking? To ‘relearn the contours of our planet at the human pace of three miles an hour . . . I hope to repair certain important connections burned through by artificial speed, by inattentiveness.’"
We are made to walk. We are so used to our car culture that we forget that walking is the most natural way to get around. That might be hard to keep in mind when you are trying to cross a street or walk where there are no sidewalks; you feel like there is no room for you in your most natural state.
Walking takes time. It also produces less stress, more joy, more health benefits. When you've simplified your life and made time for things that are the most important, you have time to walk. For pleasure, or for purpose.
It's a great way to get to know a place. All of the layers and textures. The reason the suburbs have a bad reputation for being boring and lifeless is that they are largely experienced at 30 mph +. In a downtown of a small town or in a large city, places are meant to be experienced on foot, at 3 mph. Small businesses, food trucks, mom and pop shops can survive because people can pass by slowly.
Walking makes you happy, for all of the obvious reasons. Think about places people like to go on vacation. New York City. Paris. Disney World. What do these places have in common? You walk everywhere.
Simplifying your life gives you the space you need to just get out there and take a walk. To find the space in your life to advocate, to get involved in getting sidewalks where they are needed. Discover new things about where you live. Flaneur. Wander. Get lost.
I recommend Jeff Speck's "Walkable City", an excellent read on general urban planning theory and walkablity.
Yesterday I tweeted an article on walking by Antonio Malchik, The End of Walking. He talked about journalist and National Geographic fellow Paul Salopek's seven-year walking trip.
"His reasons for walking? To ‘relearn the contours of our planet at the human pace of three miles an hour . . . I hope to repair certain important connections burned through by artificial speed, by inattentiveness.’"
We are made to walk. We are so used to our car culture that we forget that walking is the most natural way to get around. That might be hard to keep in mind when you are trying to cross a street or walk where there are no sidewalks; you feel like there is no room for you in your most natural state.
Walking takes time. It also produces less stress, more joy, more health benefits. When you've simplified your life and made time for things that are the most important, you have time to walk. For pleasure, or for purpose.
It's a great way to get to know a place. All of the layers and textures. The reason the suburbs have a bad reputation for being boring and lifeless is that they are largely experienced at 30 mph +. In a downtown of a small town or in a large city, places are meant to be experienced on foot, at 3 mph. Small businesses, food trucks, mom and pop shops can survive because people can pass by slowly.
Walking makes you happy, for all of the obvious reasons. Think about places people like to go on vacation. New York City. Paris. Disney World. What do these places have in common? You walk everywhere.
Simplifying your life gives you the space you need to just get out there and take a walk. To find the space in your life to advocate, to get involved in getting sidewalks where they are needed. Discover new things about where you live. Flaneur. Wander. Get lost.
I recommend Jeff Speck's "Walkable City", an excellent read on general urban planning theory and walkablity.
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