"When everything else has gone from my brain ... what will be left, I believe, is topology: the dreaming memory of land as it lay this way and that." Annie Dillard
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Monday, August 1, 2011
City Steps
I became a runner when I lived in Chicago, but I became a walker when I lived in New York. I ran here, too, looped the reservoir a couple of times in the morning when I lived off Central Park and, when I lived downtown, made the World Trade Center my turnaround point.
But when I think of locomotion in New York City, I think of walking most of all. Because it is so crowded here, walking can feel like navigating, looking down at the feet coming toward you, figuring out how to sidestep them. It's a choreography, a dance. But when you hit an open stretch of pavement you can rev into high gear.
Then the short blocks fly by and the bridges, too. And all the faces coming toward you seem full of good will, though you know it's the endorphins making you feel that way. But you don't care because you're walking, no flying, down the streets of New York, and you feel like you're home again.