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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Walking Helps Us Think
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In Vogues 1969 Christmas issue, Vladimir Nabokov offered some advice for teaching James Joyces Ulysses: Instead of perpetuating the pretentious nonsense of Homeric, chromatic, and visceral chapter headings, instructors should prepare maps of Dublin with Blooms and Stephens intertwining itineraries clearly traced. He drew a charming one himself. Several decades later, a Boston College English professor named Joseph Nugent and his colleagues put together an annotated Google map that shadows Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom step by step. The Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, as well as students at the Georgia Institute of Technology, have similarly reconstructed the paths of the London amblers in Mrs. Dalloway.
Such maps clarify how much these novels depend on a curious link between mind and feet. Joyce and Woolf were writers who transformed the quicksilver of consciousness into paper and ink. To accomplish this, they sent characters on walks about town. As Mrs. Dalloway walks, she does not merely perceive the city around her. Rather, she dips in and out of her past, remolding London into a highly textured mental landscape, making it up, building it round one, tumbling it, creating it every moment afresh.
Since at least the time of peripatetic Greek philosophers, many other writers have discovered a deep, intuitive connection between walking, thinking, and writing. (In fact, Adam Gopnik wrote about walking in The New Yorker just two weeks ago.) How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood up to live! Henry David Thoreau penned in his journal. Methinks that the moment my legs begin to move, my thoughts begin to flow. Thomas DeQuincey has calculated that William Wordsworthwhose poetry is filled with tramps up mountains, through forests, and along public roadswalked as many as a hundred and eighty thousand miles in his lifetime, which comes to an average of six and a half miles a day starting from age five.
What is it about walking, in particular, that makes it so amenable to thinking and writing? The answer begins with changes to our chemistry. When we go for a walk, the heart pumps faster, circulating more blood and oxygen not just to the muscles but to all the organsincluding the brain. Many experiments have shown that after or during exercise, even very mild exertion, people perform better on tests of memory and attention. Walking on a regular basis also promotes new connections between brain cells, staves off the usual withering of brain tissue that comes with age, increases the volume of the hippocampus (a brain region crucial for memory), and elevates levels of molecules that both stimulate the growth of new neurons and transmit messages between them.
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Why Walking Helps Us Think (Original Post)
Nevilledog
Jul 2022
OP
SheltieLover
(80,449 posts)1. This is why EMDR works!
babydollhead
(2,281 posts)5. EMDR saved my life n/t
multigraincracker
(37,651 posts)2. Helps me not think.
I call it "in the zone"..
Midnight Writer
(25,409 posts)3. I read, then take a walk to digest what I've just learned.
Iggo
(49,927 posts)4. I sing.
Loudly.