Shared posts

09 May 10:41

Nine out of ten economists agree: Sports stadium subsidies are dumb

by Neil deMause
Paz.alex

Very good breakdown.

The Tampa Bay Times ran a story on Saturday headlined “How much do the Tampa Bay Rays boost the local economy?“, and for once, this one talked to actual economists. The result was an article that provides an excellent primer on how it is exactly that despite all the people you see attending games and spending money, study after study shows that sports teams have minimal economic impact.

Do local economies see increased activity when a sports team is playing?

In 2008, [Holy Cross economist Victor] Matheson studied sports projects from across the country to see if taxable sales rose after stadiums were built. The study also examined whether tax collections dipped when sports leagues shut down for strikes or lockouts.

“There was simply not any bump at all,” Matheson said.

But what happens to all that money that fans are spending, then?

When a couple spends $100 for dinner and a movie, much of that money goes to waiters, ticket takers and other local workers and suppliers. Those people, in turn, spend their paychecks on rent, food and other sectors of the local economy.

Each dollar of original spending can contribute $3 to $4 to economic activity and job creation.

Professional sports mute this ripple effect.

“Spending that goes on inside a stadium tends to flow into the pockets of a relatively few, high-income individuals who live a large portion of the year outside the city,” [University of Maryland economist Dennis] Coates said. “Much of that money flows out.”

What about all those economic impact studies released by the teams that show massive tourism revenues as the result of sports spending?

One, commissioned by the Rays, noted that 160,000 tickets were bought via credit cards with out-of-state addresses — presumably tourists. Since the average Florida tourist spent $775 on their visit, the study estimated that the Rays added $122 million to the economy. The actual impact could be higher, the study suggested, because the credit card count did not capture cash-paying tourists.

However, this methodology failed to distinguish between tourists coming specifically for Rays games and tourists who came for other reasons and just happened to take in a ball game.

“A person in town to visit relatives or attend a business meeting or conference is already in town,” said Matheson, the Holy Cross professor. “That visitor would have stayed in a hotel room, gone out to dinner, even if the Rays had not had a game.”

The economists note other reasons why sports spending is overblown (some studies could be double-counting fans for each game that they attend even if they’re in town for an entire series, among other things); the whole article is worth reading. And when you’re done with that, check out Shadow of the Stadium’s rundown of other reports on how economists nearly unanimously agree that stadium subsidies are a really, really bad idea. Not that economists are always right, but it should if nothing else put the burden of proof on team owners to show why the heck they should be getting hundreds of millions of dollars in public cash, when nobody can spot any significant public benefits.

08 May 10:38

Critical Literacy in Working-Class Schools

by Sherry Linkon

In her recent post Kathy Newman discusses the lengths to which schools go to improve students’ high-stakes test scores and reminds us that parents’ income is the best predictor of students’ performance on standardized tests.  Nevertheless, when working-class public school students perform poorly on high-stakes tests we say to the teachers, “It’s your fault.  Teach better!”  What we get is teachers who teach worse:  lessons become scripted and rote.  And we say to students, “It’s your fault.  Try harder!”  What we get are students who become even more alienated and less motivated.

Of course, lurking behind the whole issue of high-stakes testing is our faith in the concept of the concept of meritocracy.  Only when meritocracy is rigorously defined and the assumptions underlying it are stated explicitly, does it become problematic.

Meritocracy starts with the assumption that, by and large, all American children start kindergarten or first grade on a nearly equal footing and as they progress through the grades those who are smart and work hard earn good grades are placed in high-status school programs, enter high-status, high-paying professions, and end up with a lot of money, status, and political power regardless of the social status of their parents.  On the other hand, students who are not smart and/or do not work hard earn poor grades are placed in low status school programs, enter low-status, low-paying occupations, and end up with little money, status, and political power regardless of the social status of their parents.

But since most children of affluent parents become affluent adults and most children of working-class parents become working-class adults, meritocracy leaves us with the conclusion that most children of affluent parents are intelligent and hard-working (the logic of merit), while most children of working-class parents are lazy and lack intelligence (the logic of deficit).

There is, however, a better explanation: school success is tied to systematic inequalities that persist from generation to generation.  Working-class children are not as well prepared for primary school as more affluent children, and they often attend different schools or are assigned different classes.  And those who have high SAT scores do not have the same access to higher education as more affluent students with similar or lower test scores.

These are fairly apparent instances of structural inequality, but there are less obvious structural phenomena at work.  Many working-class students see high-status knowledge and cultural capital as useless and even antithetical to their working-class identity.  They develop oppositional identity, defining themselves different from schoolteachers or people like them.  At the same time, the schools generally ignore any sense of importance or entitlement students may have as working-class people. So the students resist teachers’ attempts to teach, and unlike most other students, they often find affirmation for their resistance in their homes and communities.

A modified teaching paradigm ensues.  Teachers give easy assignments and provide step-by-step directions.  Classroom control becomes a paramount concern;  teachers refuse to negotiate with students in fear of losing authority.   Many teachers of working-class students see their mission as producing border crossers—students who believe in meritocracy, are academically inclined, and willingly adopt middle-class values, tastes, and interests. But many working-class students who have these qualities are defeated by structural barriers, while those who succeed are held up as proof that meritocracy works.

Since the 1930s, progressive educators like George Counts have insisted that we cannot have a real democracy so long as we have domesticating education for half the nation’s school children—children of the working class.  Counts referred to empowering education for children of the working class as “progressive education,” but today many teachers who consider themselves progressive educators buy into meritocracy as a valid concept and strive to produce border crossers, rather than empowered working-class men and women.

In 1970 Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed popularized the term “critical literacy” (so called because of Freire’s adherence to Marxist critical theory).  Freire’s literacy programs for adults in Brazil’s slums started with raising students’ consciousness of the structural inequalities that oppressed them and preparing them, largely through literacy,  to strive for justice.  Critical reading (recognizing the author’s bias and so on) has been standard reading instruction for at least fifty years.  It is sometimes referred to as critical literacy, but it falls a little shy of education based on critical theory.  Following Allan Luke, critical literacy as an explicitly political classroom agenda for the education of working-class students, devoted to changing class relations in ways that are advantageous to the working class.  It brings Mother Jones into the classroom, not as a benign topic of study but as an inspiration and model of good citizenship.

The most enduring experiment in critical literacy for school aged children in the U.S. took place not in public schools but in Sunday schools operated by the American Socialist Party.  Socialist Sunday schools served children between age 5 and 14 in many cities, between 1900 and 1920.  Students were exposed to an abundance of working-class poetry, music, theater, and dance.  Visits from labor, community, and political leaders provided them with social capital and encouraged students to have confidence and pride in working-class values, knowledge, and beliefs.  Like Freire’s literacy campaigns, the schools aimed to raise students’ consciousness regarding the structural inequalities that oppressed them and to prepare them to strive for justice. Students were encouraged to cooperate and work hard in public school to acquire high-status knowledge, cultural capital, and high levels of literacy, not simply for their intrinsic value but as sources of power in the social-political-economic arena.  This was later dubbed Machiavellian Motivation.

Students learned that capitalism without an organized, powerful working class produces things like poverty, unemployment, unsafe work, and child labor and that these phenomena cannot be solved through individual effort. They are societal (structural) problems that demand collective solutions.  So instead of quitting a job that doesn’t pay a living wage, students learned that they should pursue collective actions like starting or joining unions.

Critical literacy has found a home in some working-class public schools today, where teachers have designed lessons that reflect the values taught in the Socialist Sunday schools of a century ago.  Consider these examples:

  • A fifth grade teacher organizes a field trip where students interview striking workers on a picket line and then write about what they learned.
  • Tenth grade students studying the forced removal of American Indians from the southeast to west of the Mississippi known as The Trail of Tears share individual accounts of times when they were oppressed because they were youths, females, minorities, and/or working-class.  In a “writing circle” they turn these accounts into a collective narrative of oppression and identify the steps they could take to prevent further oppression, like joining forces with others in the same spot and looking for powerful allies.
  • In a high school where most working-class Hispanic students take “basic” classes while affluent, white students take honors classes, some affluent white students agree to have a Hispanic student “shadow” them and to talk about their plans for after high school.  The Hispanic shadow students then compare the stark differences between their own classes and life expectations and those of their affluent classmates. This gives the Hispanic students a glimpse into structural injustice. It also illustrates Machiavellian motivation: some of the Hispanic students  later push to gain admission to honors courses.

Critical literacy educators, like Socialist Sunday school teachers, endeavor to produce three kinds of  “graduates”:

1) Working-class men and women who have the understanding and motivation to participate in collective action to improve the lot of the working class (in unions, for example)

2) organic intellectuals who are able to get a deep understanding of socialist theory and still talk to workers in a language they can understand

3 ) a particular kind of border crosser—one who will never cross a picket line or become a follower of Ayn Rand.

Critical literacy educators provide working-class students with a new kind of motivation to acquire the language and communication skills and the knowledge that will make them powerful members of a powerful working class.  That is what critical literacy is all about.  I believe students in Socialist Sunday schools would have done quite well on standardized academic achievement tests if they had them back then.

Patrick J. Finn

Patrick J. Finn is Associate Professor Emeritus of Education at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York and the author of Literary with an Attitude:Educating Working-Class Children in Their Own Self-Interest.


08 May 10:35

Harrisburg joins Jefferson County with muniland securities fraud charge

by Cate Long

The near-bankrupt city of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania was charged this week by the Securities and Exchange Commission with securities fraud. Here is the official language (emphasis mine):

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged the City of Harrisburg, Pa., with securities fraud for its misleading public statements when its financial condition was deteriorating and financial information available to municipal bond investors was either incomplete or outdated.

An SEC investigation found that the misleading statements were made in the city’s budget report, annual and mid-year financial statements, and a State of the City address. This marks the first time that the SEC has charged a municipality for misleading statements made outside of its securities disclosure documents. Harrisburg has agreed to settle the charges.

The charge adds weight to my concern about the veracity of the statements made by public officials in stressed fiscal situations. These officials have had essentially no responsibility to make accurate statements concerning financial issues. For bond investors there are often no current financials on file for the issuer. Hopefully this SEC order sets a higher bar for disclosure.

Often I think public officials have little understanding of complex financial issues, and sometimes they are just misrepresenting the truth for political purposes. Occasionally there may also be illegal activities (see Jefferson County, Alabama). In Harrisburg I think we may have seen all three: A lack of understanding, political games and illegal activities. The SEC crackdown is a good start to clean up the first two parts of the problem. Here is what I wrote about Harrisburg’s lack of disclosure in 2011:

The city has not published a “CAFR,” or Comprehensive Annual Financial Review, since 2008 and I have not been able to find any useful budget documents with the exception of the 2011 Harrisburg Municipal Financial Recovery Act report, which the state assigned an overseer to compile. Basically, with the exception of the overseer’s report, it’s not clear what the financial picture is for Harrisburg.

Here is what the SEC order provided as an example of fraud:

According to the SEC’s order, another public statement available to investors on the city’s website was the annual State of the City address delivered on April 9, 2009. The address only discussed the municipal resource recovery facility as a situation that was an “additional challenge” and an “issue that can be resolved.” The address was misleading because it failed to mention that by this time, Harrisburg had already made $1.8 million in guarantee payments on the resource recovery facility bond debt. It also omitted the total amount of the debt that the city would likely have to repay from its general fund. By this time, Harrisburg knew that the Authority had failed to secure the requested rate increase, making it likely that Harrisburg would have to repay $260 million of the debt as guarantor.

Harrisburg’s 2009 State of the City address was delivered by Stephen Reed, the mayor prior to Linda Thompson. Potential illegal practices around the city’s finances that were led by former mayor Reed have not been resolved. There have been indications that serious problems related to the city’s debt issuance existed. The Patriot News wrote about the former state-appointed receiver David Unkovic’s concerns last December:

Yet during all those years, according to Harrisburg’s former receiver, David Unkovic, Reed used fiscal sleight of hand — or worse — to build a house of cards. Today, Unkovic said, the house is about to collapse.

“There is so much corruption in this city. The city has been mismanaged for 20 years,” Unkovic said recently before abruptly resigning March 30.

The SEC cannot file criminal charges, but it refers cases to the Department of Justice. There was a raft of characters involved in the multiple rounds of Harrisburg’s bond financing. The corruption in Harrisburg is likely as large as the corruption in Jefferson County. Stay tuned.

Additional Reading:

07 May 12:24

Dolphins tout stadium vote with “opportunity fair” for nonexistent jobs

by Neil deMause
Paz.alex

This blog is Wonkette for the public finance set.

Only two weeks to go before a public vote on your stadium renovation plan that everybody hates? Here’s a creative way to get people thinking of it as a jobs package instead of a $127 million stadium subsidy: Invite people to apply for jobs at the stadium that don’t exist yet!

As the team touts a proposed $350 million renovation of Sun Life Stadium as a job creator worthy of tax dollars, the Dolphins will open up Sun Life Stadium on Thursday to aspiring construction workers, laborers and others who would want to work on the project…

Rick Beasley, head of the South Florida Workforce employment agency … praised the Dolphins for getting a head start in lining up local workers for what would be one of the largest construction profits underway in Miami-Dade.

“Some people can be skeptical and say this is just a ploy to get people out to vote,” he said. “For me, I want to make sure we have people in the system ready” to take a job.

Transparent vote ploy or sop to desperate unemployed Florida construction workers? Why can’t it be both?

07 May 12:19

He laid more than 136 bricks per minute. All day.

by davetabler@appalachianhistory.net (Dave Tabler)
Paz.alex

Meanwhile public works takes two days to fill a pothole.

Item 032596 in the collection of the West Virginia Historical Photographs Collection reads Testament to the Brick Laying Prowess of Thoney Pietro and appears to be a 1946 newspaper clipping, though its source is not identified in the collection.

“The life of Thoney Pietro has not always been that of a retired country gentleman; he has earned the right to retire by his own labors. He commenced his career as a common laborer, but he was never content with doing anything less than his best.

“A typical example of his physical strength and skill, as well as his desire to be the best at any job, occurred during September, 1900, when he was working as a bricklayer for James McAfee and Company, of Allegheny, Pennsylvania, who were engaged in a street paving project in Homestead, Pennsylvania.

Thoney Pietro Company Road Crew in Williamson WVPietro Company Road Crew at work in Williamson, W. Va., 1915

“The speed and skill with which young Pietro handled the paving bricks attracted the attention of his superintendent, a Mr.Ross, supt.of the work,who became so enthused over the young Italian’s prowess that he offered to bet $300.00 that Pietro could better the existing record for the number of bricks laid in a given time. The record was then held by an Irishman who had laid 806 square yards of brick in ten hours.

“Admirers of the Irishman quickly took the bet. So on a bright September morning in 1900, 0n 12th Avenue in Homestead, Pennsylvania, the contest was held. Eight hours and fifteen minutes later measurements disclosed that Pietro had established a new record and one which stands to this day – he had laid single handed a section of street 30 feet in width and 350 feet long- an amazing total of 1166 square yards of brick, 58 bricks per sq.yd., totaling 67,628 bricks or an average of more than 136 bricks per minute all day. The same bricks as he laid then are still in use 46 years later.”

Thoney+Pietro bricklaying Williamson+WV appalachia appalachian+history history+of+appalachia

The post He laid more than 136 bricks per minute. All day. appeared first on Appalachian History.

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07 May 12:14

April 27, 2013


07 May 10:57

Physicist: How Long Would It Take for an AT-AT to Fall?

by John Farrier

AT-AT

For a long time, I've suspected that much of the footage of the Battle of Hoth was digitally altered. Now physicist Rhett Allain gives me reason to have those doubts. He's crunched the numbers and determined that the AT-AT that Luke Skywalker allegedly destroyed was actually a model. How can Prof. Allain be sure? Because a real AT-AT would have taken longer to fall over:

According to this, how tall would the center of mass have to be in order to just take 3.5 seconds to fall over? It would just be about 9 meters tall. So, here are my options.

  • The gravitational field on Hoth is not like Earth. I crunched the numbers (re-ran the calculation) and you would need g to be about twice the value of Earth’s in order to get a tip over time of 3.5 seconds (starting from 5 degrees). However, this would not agree with the falling Luke.
  • The center of mass of the AT-AT is not where you think it is. This could be the case if the legs were super massive. Why would they be so massive? Who knows? (well, maybe George Lucas would know)
  • The AT-AT is not 22.5 meters tall but instead like half that height. Of course, this wouldn’t agree with Luke’s fall time.
  • The AT-AT didn’t actually tip over. Instead, it was an inside sabotage job by some disgruntled Storm Troopers. Wait, this wouldn’t explain the fall time.

So, you see there are some problems with this scene. I guess the only reasonable thing to do is to make a new version of The Empire Strikes Back. In this new version, the AT-AT would take another second to fall over. Sure, this might be a lot of work to redo the whole movie for just one scene – but think of all the new Star Wars Blu-ray sales.

The secrets are emerging.

Link

(Images: Lucasfilm, Rhett Allain)

07 May 10:54

Gender Gap in Large U.S. Cities

by thegirlsgotsoul

Where are all the Men? Where are all the Women? What cities have a gender advantage when you are looking for love?
07 May 10:53

The Government Already has Quantum Internet For 2 Years

by Alex Santoso
Paz.alex

Well clearly they're not using it in Pittsburgh yet, amirite?

While the rest of us were busy talking about the potential of quantum networks, which would allow for perfectly secure communication based on the laws of quantum mechanics, the gub'ment has been running one for at least two years:

Today, Richard Hughes and pals at Los Alamos National Labs in New Mexico reveal an alternative quantum internet, which they say they’ve been running for two and half years. Their approach is to create a quantum network based around a hub and spoke-type network. All messages get routed from any point in the network to another via this central hub. [...]

Hughes and co say they’ve solved this with their unique approach which equips each node in the network with quantum transmitters–ie lasers–but not with photon detectors which are expensive and bulky. Only the hub is capable of receiving a quantum message (although all nodes can send and receiving conventional messages in the normal way).

Link - via digg

06 May 12:21

A Column That Only Canadians Will Understand

by John Farrier

Canadian

Dave Bidini has a column in the National Post. I have no idea what he's talking about. Google Translate isn't helping a bit. Do you understand?

For years, I was a keener, but after my short-lived stint as reeve of Dildo, Nfld., in which I stumped for the still-unpopular Gouge and Screw Tax — dinged in the polls and my approval rating going downhill as fast as a runaway toboggan or a bus shagger — I put the kerfuffle behind me and tried to forget the fact that I’d been soundly turfed, even though Joey Smallwood’s buddy had cherry-picked me himself. I got off the chesterfield, threw on my old housecoat and thongs, hucked a forty pounder, half-sack of swish and mickey of goof in a Loblaws bag over my shoulder before leaving my bachelor apartment to head due west past fire halls and hydros and parkades and corner stores in the direction of Dead Rear, Oilberta looking for some kind of joe job — cleaning eavestroughs; stitching hockey sweaters; packing Smarties; anything! — although damned if I knew whether I would find work once I got there.

Link -via Nag on the Lake

(Photo: tnimalan)

06 May 11:51

Star Wars Infomercials

by Miss Cellania

(YouTube link)

Here we have a compilation of late night infomercials from a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away. Just dip it in carbonite! Only $19.95 (plus shipping and handling). Produced by Milynn Sarley, also known as The Gamer Chick. -via Viral Viral Videos

02 May 12:41

Heinz headquarters in Pittsburgh; 1968 ad for Heinz Ketchup. 





Heinz headquarters in Pittsburgh; 1968 ad for Heinz Ketchup. 

01 May 02:12

Mapping Your City's Open Data

by _oTo_

If your city is one of the many cities who have opened the data from their departments and agencies to the public, what next? This infographic is a template for mapping two important pieces of information: who is publishing data, and what about? This infographic also takes a look at the likely evolution of a city's open data project over time.
27 Apr 19:39

The ruins of old America

by Cate Long

A stronghold of America’s establishment may be about to be toppled. The world’s largest Masonic Temple in Detroit will be foreclosed for unpaid taxes. The bones of twentieth-century America are withering away. Detroit’s WXYZ reports:

It’s a nationally registered historic landmark built in the 1920s.

It’s a symbol of art, culture and grandeur.

And according to county tax documents; it’s in foreclosure.

Wayne County says the owners of the Masonic Temple have forfeited their right to the Detroit building because of more than $150,000 in back taxes.

The Masons once represented one of the strongest fraternal organizations in America. Their “lodges” or “temples” are found across the states as relics of a once strong national organization. In many ways, the decline and abandonment of these edifices is a mirror-image of the decline of American manufacturing. Detroit, once the wealthiest city in America, had both the largest and grandest Masonic Temple and manufacturing base. Now both have crumbled to ruins.

Recent commentary from the GW Bush Institute talks about Detroit’s decline:

Detroit has demonstrated that a city can go backward, passing its ‘take-off’ stage and thus presenting the phenomenon of what might be called ‘de-development.’ It may just be possible that a city’s economy can fail so badly it might be said to be crossing the ‘turn-off’ barrier, a point of no return. With a shrinking population, no capacity to generate tax revenue, and no new businesses of scale that would provide a consequential number of new jobs, the city might just find itself in a place from which there can be no self-generated recovery.

Detroit is just one of many U.S. cities in this situation:

Detroit is not alone in this process of reverse growth. There are at least 25 cities in the U.S., including Buffalo, Gary, and Hartford, where indigenous economies have shown no capacity to expand for over five decades. In the 1960 census, each was counted among our 100 most populous cities. Today, each of these cities has conditions similar to those of Detroit, albeit smaller in scale, but with equally devastating impact.

Detroit and other economically collapsing cities need radical new approaches to halt their decline. One possibility may be to remove all property, corporate and personal income taxes and any other fees for anyone establishing manufacturing facilities in their communities. If states and possibly the federal government would match this tax relief by granting a five or ten-year tax holiday to new manufacturers, you might see entrepreneurs willing to risk their capital in these economically abandoned places. Cities must do more than create start-up zones and mentoring programs.

Detroit will never return to the glory days when it erected the world’s largest Masonic Temple. But it can move more aggressively to reignite economic development. The path may be to return to its roots as a manufacturing powerhouse.

27 Apr 18:58

A map of U.S. roads and nothing else

by Robert T. Gonzalez
Paz.alex

Really stunning.

Pretty much does what it says on the tin. No topography, no labels, no lakes. Just a big, zoomable map covered with all the roads in the lower 48. We think it's beautiful.

Read more...

    


27 Apr 18:50

Alex Jones Will Help You Find Your New Conspiracy Soul Mate, Today!

Are you lonely tonight? Do you feel like no one else understands your raging paranoia about FEMA camps and government bullet hoarding and the False Flag Boston Bombings what was done by the CIA or whatever? Well Alex Jones is here to help you find love, and we are here to help you look through [...]
27 Apr 18:46

Sixpence None The Richer's Kiss Me in Klingon

by Alex Santoso
Paz.alex

You wonder what the YouTube of the mid 90s would look like.

You may recognize the tune right away, but here's something you don't know about Sixpence None The Richer's Kiss Me. It sounds much better sung the way it's meant to be heard: in Klingon. The fact that there's no word in Klingon for kiss isn't a problem in the least.

Jen Usellis and Improvised Star Trek teamed up to produce the best song you'll hear today. Hit play or go to Link [YouTube] - via MeFi

27 Apr 18:39

Paintings of Walmart

by John Farrier

Some artists paint still lifes, landscapes or nudes. Brendan O'Connell, however, paints the interiors of Walmart stores:
Works such as "Deli and Shampoo" capture Walmart shoppers in their natural habitat. In a few decades, such scenes may no longer be part of everyday life, O'Connell says -- just look at how quickly the bookstore is fading into nonexistence.
Early on, O'Connell, who lives in rural Connecticut, was kicked out of many stores. A man taking pictures of shoppers and bottles of mayonnaise seemed odd. Eventually store managers came to accept his research methods (positive press didn't hurt) and welcomed him back, sometimes even supplying a forklift for panoramic shots. The company also bought a painting he made of the original Wal-Mart store. Now fans can submit their own photos on Twitter and Facebook for a project O'Connell calls Everyday Walart. Any would-be muse whose photo inspires a painting receives a free, signed print of the work.

Gallery and News Story -via Weird Universe

24 Apr 10:08

Eugene Smith – “Steelworker with Goggles,” Pittsburgh,...



Eugene Smith – “Steelworker with Goggles,” Pittsburgh, 1955

23 Apr 10:06

Solvitur Ambulando: It Is Solved By Walking

by Brett & Kate McKay
Paz.alex

Wow, great AoM.

muir

“It is the best of humanity, I think, that goes out to walk. In happy hours all affairs may be wisely postponed for this. Dr. Johnson said, ‘Few men know how to take a walk,’ and it is pretty certain that Dr. Johnson was not one of those few. It is a fine art; there are degrees of proficiency, and we distinguish the professors from the apprentices. The qualifications are endurance, plain clothes, old shoes, an eye for nature, good-humor, vast curiosity, good speech, good silence, and nothing too much. Good observers have the manners of trees and animals, and if they add words, it is only when words are better than silence. But a vain talker profanes the river and the forest, and is nothing like so good company as a dog.” –Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Country Life,” 1857

“Your true kingdom is just around you, and your leg is your scepter. A muscular, manly leg, one untarnished by sloth or sensuality, is a wonderful thing.” –Alfred Barron, Foot Notes, Or, Walking as a Fine Art, 1875

Solvitur ambulando.

It’s a Latin phrase that literally means, “It is solved by walking.” Or, a little more loosely, “It is solved by walking around.”

Walking? “What problems have ever been solved by walking?” you may be asking yourself.

True enough, there is hardly anything more simple and less exciting than walking. It’s one of our first developmental milestones as babies, and once you take those initial toddling steps, neither you, nor those around you, take much notice of your walking ever again. If you happen to think about walking later in life, images of elderly women decked out in windsuits and circling the mall in the early morning hours may come to mind. Indeed, so unsexy is walking that our word for a person who travels by foot — pedestrian — is also a synonym for “dull” and “ordinary.”

‘Twas not always so, however. There was a time in which writers and philosophers wrote poems and paeans to the humble walk, publishing books and essays with titles such as “The Reveries of the Solitary Walker,” “In Praise of Walking,” and “Walking as a Fine Art.” Bipedal locomotion was referred to as “the manly art of walking,” and enrollment in the “noble army of walkers” was encouraged.

Did these long-dead bipedaling boosters know something that modern men do not? While walking’s simplicity may seem like a mark against it, perhaps its rudimentary nature is just the thing to bring us back to life’s much needed basics. Walking upright is part of what makes us human, after all, and who wouldn’t benefit from getting in touch with their humanity a little more often?

Walking is the world’s most democratic activity – it is open to almost everyone, whether young or old, rich or poor. It can be participated in no matter where you are. One can walk to work, stroll around their neighborhood, stride down city blocks, ramble through a parking lot, or saunter over hill and dale. All it takes to begin is placing one foot in front of the other. Despite this accessibility, we probably do less walking these days than ever before in history – the bulk of our day is spent riding, driving, and sitting.

Yet, taking the time to fit in more walking wherever and whenever we can, and putting our legs to their intended use, is a worthwhile endeavor. Below we discuss 11 “problems” that can be “solved” through the completely free remedy of taking a walk. We’ve also peppered the post with some of the best and pithiest quotes that we dug up from the surprisingly robust canon of walking literature. Think of this piece as one part article, one part quote repository. Read it through in one fell swoop, or come back to it from time to time when you need some motivation to get yourself out the door.

Solvitur ambulando.

Need a cheap form of transportation?

walk

“For most urbanites there is the opportunity for the daily walk to and from work, if only they were not tempted by the wheel of the street car or motor. During the subway strike in New York not long ago I saw ablebodied men riding in improvised barges or buses going at a slower-than-walking pace, because, I suppose, though still possessed of legs, these cliff-dwellers had become enslaved by wheels, just like the old mythical Ixion who was tied to one.” –John Finley, “Traveling Afoot,” 1917

“When I see the discomforts that ablebodied American men will put up with rather than go a mile or half a mile on foot, the abuses they will tolerate and encourage, crowding the street car on a little fall in the temperature or the appearance of an inch or two of snow, packing up to overflowing, dangling to the straps, treading on each other’s toes, breathing each other’s breaths, crushing the women and children, hanging by tooth and nail to a square inch of the platform, imperiling their limbs and killing the horses—I think the commonest tramp in the street has good reason to felicitate himself on his rare privilege of going afoot. Indeed, a race that neglects or despises this primitive gift, that fears the touch of the soil, that has no footpaths, no community of ownership in the land which they imply, that warns off the walker as a trespasser, that knows no way but the highway, the carriage-way, that forgets the stile, the foot-bridge, that even ignores the rights of the pedestrian in the public road, providing no escape for him but in the ditch or up the bank, is in a fair way to far more serious degeneracy.” –John Burroughs, “The Exhilarations of the Road,” 1895

Obviously, the most basic, primitive function of walking is to get from A to B. Foot-power requires no money, and no energy source besides a peanut butter sandwich. Yet, as Burroughs lamented over a century ago, as soon as motorized transportation was invented, people would do most anything to avoid having to hoof it. For some it’s a matter of convenience, often real, sometimes only perceived; many do not think of walking for even the shortest of errands, choosing to drive even when getting into one’s car and finding a parking spot can take almost as long. Others see walking as a safety hazard; I’m always amazed at the number of parents in SUVs that line up in my neighborhood in the afternoon in order to whisk their children right from the bus the quarter-mile to their house. Many folks, on the other hand, do wish they could walk more to get where they need to be, but their city/town was not laid out with any concern for pedestrian transportation. For someone who grew up in such a pedestrian-antagonistic town, moving to a place where walking becomes a practical possibility requires a mindset change. When I moved to Vermont for a stint, for the first time in my life I could walk into town to do my errands, and while at first the 15-minute “journey” seemed looong, I grew to really enjoy it and it became quite natural; soon if I needed to go somewhere, my first instinct was whether I could walk it.

Want to be prepared, come what may?

“I have read that the Scotch once had a custom of making a yearly pilgrimage or excursion around their boroughs or cities — ‘beating the bounds,’ they called it, following the boundaries that they might know what they had to defend. It is a custom that might profitably be revived. We should then know better the cities in which we live. We should be stronger, healthier, for such expeditions, and the better able and the more willing to defend our boundaries.” –John Finley, “Traveling Afoot,” 1917

“It is good for a man to keep himself in such condition that he can do ten miles on short notice. The deficiency in this respect, to which most people confess, is not a pleasant thing to contemplate.” –Alfred Barron, Footnotes, Or, Walking as a Fine Art, 1875

Even if those in developed countries rarely have a need to walk to get where they’re going, keeping up one’s walking endurance seems like a good “survival” skill to have. If walking once again became the only form of transportation available, say during the apocalypse, you’d be able to push your shopping cart of supplies across the country, ala the father in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. Being able to walk long distances is also essential for being prepared for military service – where a principle form of transportation is the good old-fashioned march.

theodore roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt walking to work. September 20, 1901.

Near the end of Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency, he was out on one of his regular “rough cross-country walks” at DC’s Rock Creek Park with some young Army officers. He was chagrined to hear from them of the “condition of utter physical worthlessness into which certain of the elder ones [officers] had permitted themselves to lapse, and the very bad effect this would certainly have if ever the army were called into service.” When TR looked into the matter, he found that “otherwise good men proved as unable to walk as if they had been sedentary brokers.” He thus “issued directions that each officer should prove his ability to walk fifty miles, or ride one hundred, in three days.” Despite the fact that this was a test, Teddy argued, “which many a healthy middleaged woman would be able to meet,” he got a lot of pushback from older officers who worked desk jobs. TR settled the matter by performing the ride requirement himself in snow and sleet, demonstrating how easy it was.

According to a naval officer who wrote to Roosevelt, the walking test was highly effective in getting men ready for the rigors of service:

“The original test of 50 miles in three days did a very great deal of good. It decreased by thousands of dollars the money expended on street car fare, and by a much greater sum the amount expended over the bar. It eliminated a number of the wholly unfit; it taught officers to walk; it forced them to learn the care of their feet and that of their men; and it improved their general health and was rapidly forming a taste for physical exercise…

This test may have been a bit too strenuous for old hearts (of men who had never taken any exercise), but it was excellent as a matter of instruction and training of handling feet—and in an emergency (such as we soon may have in Mexico) sound hearts are not much good if the feet won’t stand.”

The officer lamented that the Navy had since changed the standard to ten miles once a month — a test which he found would not produce the same benefits as a walk that had to be carried out over at least two days. The reason? The first day of walking is easy; it’s the second day, when one’s muscles and feet are sore, that’s the real challenge. The prospect of that second day, the officer explained, is what:

“made ‘em sit up and take notice—made ‘em practice walking, made ‘em avoid street cars, buy proper shoes, show some curiosity about sox and the care of the feet in general…

The point is that whereas formerly officers had to practice walking a bit and give some attention to proper footgear, now they don’t have to, and the natural consequence is that they don’t do it.

There are plenty of officers who do not walk any more than is necessary to reach a street car that will carry them from their residences to their offices. Some who have motors do not do so much. They take no exercise. They take cocktails instead and are getting beefy and ‘ponchy,’ and something should be done to remedy this state of affairs.”

Spiritually dry?

“I have met with but one or two persons in the course of my life who understood the art of Walking, that is, of taking walks,—who had a genius, so to speak, for sauntering, which word is beautifully derived ‘from idle people who roved about the country, in the Middle Ages, and asked charity, under pretense of going a la Sainte Terre,’ to the Holy Land, till the children- exclaimed, ‘There goes a SainteTerrer,’ Saunterer, a Holy-Lander. They who never go to the Holy Land in their walks, as they pretend, are indeed mere idlers and vagabonds; but they who do go there are saunterers in the good sense, such as I mean….For every walk is a sort of crusade, preached by some Peter the Hermit in us, to go forth and reconquer this Holy Land from the hands of the Infidels.” —Henry D. Thoreau, “Walking,” 1862

“The geographical pilgrimage is the symbolic acting out an inner journey. The inner journey is the interpolation of the meanings and signs of the outer pilgrimage. One can have one without the other. It is best to have both.” –Thomas Merton, Mystics & Zen Masters, 1961

Pilgrimages – the purest of which are conducted on foot – are a religious rite shared by nearly all the world’s faiths. That believers of varying stripes might incorporate walking into their pursuit of spirituality is not surprising. A pilgrimage takes our shared metaphor of life as a journey, in which a lone sojourner must struggle with courage and hope through the wilderness, and turns it into a concrete, bodily experience; it converts the abstract into a tangible path, with real goals and obstacles and pain.

A pilgrimage can separate the traveler from the distractions of everyday life and act as a process of transformation and purification. The physical hardship of the journey can nullify the temptations of the flesh, while also showing one’s devotion to his faith; a pilgrim may hope to present this sacrifice to God as a penance for his sins, or an offering for the healing of another. And of course the pilgrim may experience additional insights or blessings once he reaches the holy site he has journeyed to.

“I personally would rather do the existentially essential things in life on foot. If you live in England and your girlfriend is in Sicily, and it is clear you want to marry her, then you should walk to Sicily to propose. For these things travel by car or aeroplane is not the right thing.” –Werner Herzog, Of Walking in Ice, 1978

Even an avowed atheist might believe that the effort put forth through walking could somehow be converted into a kind of supernatural force. Such is the case of filmmaker Werner Herzog, who does not have a belief in God, but does possess a sort of faith in walking. In 1974, when he was 32 years old, Herzog heard that film historian and critic Lotte H. Eisner was gravely ill. Herzog considered her a dear mentor, and vowed, “I am not going to fly, I refuse to take a plane, refuse to take a car, I refuse to do anything else, I will come on foot,” because, he explained, “I was totally absolutely convinced that while I was walking from Germany to Paris to see her, she would not have a chance to die.”

Herzog used his compass to determine the straightest course to his destination and then set out in the middle of winter to walk from Munich to Lotte’s home in France – a journey of nearly 515 miles. For three weeks he traveled as a hobo, eschewing hotels in favor of abandoned homes and barns, and spent his journey getting reacquainted with himself, as well as observing the people and places he encountered. After hundreds of miles of arduous tramping, he arrived in France to find that his faith in walking had not been in vain — Lotte was indeed still alive and well.

Want to really get to know a place?

tourist

“Your pedestrian is always cheerful, alert, refreshed, with his heart in his hand and his hand free to all. He looks down upon nobody; he is on the common level. His pores are all open, his circulation is active, his digestion good. His heart is not cold, nor his faculties asleep. He is the only real traveller…He is not isolated, but one with things, with the farms and industries on either hand. The vital, universal currents play through him. He knows the ground is alive; he feels the pulses of the wind, and reads the mute language of things. His sympathies are all aroused; his senses are continually reporting messages to his mind. Wind, frost, ruin, heat, cold, are something to him. He is not merely a spectator of the panorama of nature, but a participator in it. He experiences the country he passes through—tastes it, feels it, absorbs it; the traveller in his fine carriage sees it merely. This gives the fresh charm to that class of books that may be called “Views Afoot,” and to the narratives of hunters, naturalists, exploring parties, etc. The walker does not need a large territory. When you get into a railway car you want a continent, the man in his carriage requires a township; but a walker like Thoreau finds as much and more along the shores of Walden pond…

I think if I could walk through a country I should not only see many things and have adventures that I would otherwise miss, but that I should come into relations with that country at first band, and with the men and women in it, in a way that would afford the deepest satisfaction…

Man takes root at his feet, and at best he is no more than a potted plant in his house or carriage, till he has established communication with the soil by the loving and magnetic touch of his soles to it. Then the tie of association is born; then spring those invisible fibres and rootlets through which character comes to smack of the soil, and which makes a man kindred to the spot of earth he inhabits.” -John Burroughs, “The Exhilarations of the Road,” 1895

There is no better way of getting to know a place — whether your own backyard or an exotic locale — than by walking it. At such a slow pace, you are able to notice rich details that would otherwise pass you by. In your neighborhood you begin to observe the little details of others’ homes; in the woods you discover new plants and creatures; in the city you find small stores, restaurants, and alleyways you’d otherwise miss; when venturing abroad you give yourself opportunities to meet and converse with the locals. Whenever I visit a new place, I’m eager to set off on a walk from my lodgings to explore the sights, sounds, and smells of my new surroundings.

This was actually the method of exploration used predominantly by Meriwether Lewis as part of the Lewis and Clark expedition. While his comrades were often in the river on boats, he would stride along on foot, taking copious notes and drawing as many species of flora and fauna as he could. His contributions to science and exploration — in large part due to his walking — are considered immeasurable.

Getting acquainted with a new nation is quite an adventure, but as Burroughs notes, you don’t need a huge area to cover in order to keep yourself occupied on your walks for quite some time. Alfred Barron, author of 1875’s Footnotes, Or, Walking as a Fine Art, makes this calculation: “If you confine yourself to walks of twelve miles in every direction from your home, you have a field of observation comprising four hundred and fifty-two square miles.” There’s plenty to explore right outside your door!

Lacking inspiration?

college

“I walk chiefly to visit natural objects, but I sometimes go on foot to visit myself. It often happens when I am on an outward-bound excursion, that I also discover a good deal of my own thought. He is a poor reporter, indeed, who does not note his thought as well as his sight. The profit of a walk depends on your waiting for the golden opportunity — on your getting an inspired hint before setting out…

These members [legs] when in motion, are so stimulating to thought and mind, they almost deserve to be called the reflective organs. As in the night an iron-shod horse stumbling along a stony road kicks out sparks, so let a man take to his legs and soon his brain will begin to grow luminous and sparkle.” –Alfred Barron, Foot Notes, Or, Walking as a Fine Art, 1875

“I can only meditate when I am walking. When I stop, I cease to think; my mind only works with my legs.” –Jean-Jacque Rousseau, Confessions, 1782

Throughout history, great minds in literature, philosophy, and science have found important insight and inspiration while out on a walk. Perhaps this is because walking – at least while out in nature (which is the kind of walking many of these thinkers favored) – has been shown by modern science to improve memory and attention. Or perhaps it’s because walking simply gets the blood pumping – a hard to quantify effect of invigoration.

William Wordsworth composed most of his poems while walking through meadows, moors, and mountains. He rambled in every kind of weather and all over Europe; a friend calculated that he had walked 180,000 miles in his life. Even in his 60s he was able to tour 20 miles a day.

Legend has it that Aristotle did his thinking and lecturing while walking, and students of his school of philosophy in Athens came to be known as Peripatetic philosophers — those “given to walking about.”

Nikola Tesla’s idea for his AC induction motor came to him while he was on a long walk through the city of Budapest. As he passed through a park and gazed at the sunset, “the idea came like a flash of lightning and in an instant the truth was revealed.”

For more examples of great thinkers whose minds were spurred on by their legs, we can do no better than turn to Bailey Millard, who penned this 1905 piece for The Critic, splendidly titled “The Relation of Legs to Literature”:

“Much bending over the folio does not make the better part of poetry or of prose. It inheres as much in the physiological condition that results from the swinging of the legs, which movement quickens heart action and stimulates the brain by supplying it with blood charged with the life-giving principle of the open air.

By taking a lover’s walk with the muse one may more readily woo words into new relations with thought than by sitting at a desk. And, leaving aside the matter of inspiration and looking at the subject from a lower plane, one finds that walking abroad often gives to the elusive, amorphous ideas, lurking darkly in the cerebral background, such clarity as is vainly sought within the compass of thought-impeding walls. Nearly all those poets whose lives are open to us have been good walkers—men and women who rambled about everywhere, adding to the scholar’s stimulus of study a truer poetical stimulus found along the woodland ways and out under the blue tenuity of the sky. In fact, I have long suspected that the flabby flexors and extensors of the locomotor media of our modern poets are largely responsible for the invertebrate verse of present production.

…Shelley, we are told, rambled everywhere. Goethe found his extensive walks about Weimar a source of great inspirational profit. Browning’s incomparable “Parcellus”‘ was composed for the most part during his rambles in the Dulwick woods. At any stage of his superb singing, wherever he happened to be, he would give his feet the freedom of the highway and the byway. He composed in the open air and trod out, as it were, many of his best lines. The tonic quality of his verse is, in a great measure, due to his habit of faring forth where he might “think the thoughts that lilies speak in white.”

…Dickens thought that it was necessary for him to walk as many hours as he wrote, and the excess of animal spirits which his work reveals throughout makes one feel that his system for maintaining that physical energy which begets mental alertness was an excellent one.

That artificial aid to locomotion, the bicycle, is in no way conducive to deep thought. Zola found that when he wanted to stop thinking the surest way was to ride forth a-wheel. The man with the “Here-I-come!” look in his face worn by so many wheelmen, is not likely to be doing much in the way of creative thought, clever and amiable though he may be as a road companion.

As for the philosophic brood, I find that most of them were men of sound legs, from Plato and Aristotle of the famous walking school down to Montaigne, Johnson, Carlyle, Ruskin and our own clearest minds, Emerson and Thoreau. Montaigne would have no fire in his great Circular study, which was “16 paces” (or shall we say about 40 feet?) in diameter. He warmed his mind as well as his body by walking. ‘My thoughts will sleep if I seat them,’ he declares. ‘My wit will not budge if my legs do not shake it up.’

…It is true that the nearer you approach the age of the trolley, the less depth is apparent in philosophy; which leads one to suspect that the Peripatetic School is the true school in any age…

As for Thoreau, his fine contribution to the world’s literature was as truly walked as it was written. So has been the work of John Burroughs, on the Atlantic side of the continent, and that of John Muir, the accredited spokesman for nature on the Pacific coast. If writings may be said to be manufactured by an author, then these latter were as truly pedufactured; and in offering our lexicographers this uncouth word I do so without a blush. For I plead guilty to a strong prejudice for the book that is walked first and written afterward. Other work may be more brilliant, and, in a sense, more clever, but that quality which one finds in the book which is walked is something never found in the book that makes no show of legs but all of head. The book that is walked, whether of prose or of verse, reveals ‘the buoyant child surviving in the man,’ of which Coleridge, himself a stout foot traveler, sings.”

Need a cheap form of exercise?

“I have two doctors, my left leg and my right. When body and mind are out of gear (and those twin parts of me live at such close quarters that the one always catches melancholy from the other) I know that I have only to call in my doctors and I shall be well again.” –George Macaulay Trevelyan, “Walking,” 1913

By now everyone knows the importance of regular exercise. What doesn’t get as much attention is that many of the health benefits of exercise are not predicated on sweating at the gym and using the latest and greatest equipment; all you need to do is hit the pavement. Walking is a low-impact activity that’s accessible to nearly everyone and has been shown to lower bad cholesterol and raise the good, reduce your blood pressure, strengthen muscles and bones, improve glucose control and insulin response, prevent and manage diabetes, and decrease your chances of becoming obese and getting heart disease.

Americans sometimes marvel at our European brethren who seem to enjoy good food and drink, turn up their noses at slaving away at the gym, and yet still remain trim. Part of their “secret” is that they walk three times more than we do.

Of course, as already mentioned many American cities aren’t very walkable and lack sidewalks. If you live in such a place, you can still squeeze in more short walk breaks at work and take a walk during lunch and in the mornings and evenings at home (getting a dog can help get you out the door). When I’m traveling, I usually have to skip my regular workout, and so I walk loops around the airport during layovers for a gentle bout of exercise. Helps pass the time, too.

Stressed, depressed, or anxious?

stressed

“The best thing is to walk…Movement is the best cure for melancholy.” –Bruce Chatwin, Anatomy of Restlessness, 1996

“I think that I cannot preserve my health and spirits unless I spend four hours a day at least— and it is commonly more than that—sauntering through the woods and over the hills and fields, absolutely free from all worldly engagements. You may safely say, A penny for your thoughts, or a thousand pounds. When sometimes I am reminded that the mechanics and shopkeepers stay in their shops not only all the forenoon, but all the afternoon too, sitting with crossed legs, so many of them—as if the legs were made to sit upon, and not to stand or walk upon—I think that they deserve some credit for not having all committed suicide long ago.

I am alarmed when it happens that I have walked a mile into the woods bodily without getting there in spirit. In my afternoon walk I would fain forget all my morning occupations and my obligations to society. But it sometimes happens that I cannot easily shake off the village. The thought of some work will run in my head, and I am not where my body is—I am out of my senses. In my walks I would fain return to my senses. What business have I in the woods, if I am thinking of something out of the woods?” –Henry David Thoreau, “Walking,” 1862

Going for a walk is a highly effective way to reduce your stress, depression, and anxiety. Like any form of exercise, walking releases endorphins which give pleasure to your brain and reduce your stress hormones, but unlike other forms of exercise, you can do it anywhere, anytime. A brisk 20- to 30-minute walk can have the same calming effect as a mild tranquilizer, and walking daily for a half-hour has been shown to quickly relieve major depression.

Walking has also been shown to clear the mind and refresh the senses. It’s a form of “meditation in action” which can rejuvenate your “brain fatigue.” Research has shown that reaching this meditative state through walking is made much easier when you take your stroll in nature, or even simply a small green space within a city. The mechanism at work here is a psychological phenomenon called “involuntary attention.” As opposed to the frenetic cityscape which grabs our attention in an exhausting way, natural surroundings engage the brain, but do it an effortless manner that still allows space for reflection. In this calm state, the knot of worries that have been tangling up from our day-to-day lives can more easily be unraveled and released.

Focusing on deeper meditation as you walk by centering your thoughts only on the present – concentrating on the movements of your body or counting your steps – can also help you tame your “monkey mind” which begets anxiety in its constant need to flit from one thing to another.

Finally, walking’s rejuvenating power may be located in the opportunity it provides for much needed solitude. Our two feet provide the opportunity to leave behind the crowd and the noise of the world at a moment’s notice, and regain our solitary independence.

Feeling like you’re about to flip out?

walk2

“An Eskimo custom offers an angry person release by walking the emotion out of his or her system in a straight line across the landscape; the point at which the anger is conquered is marked with a stick, bearing witness to the strength or length of the rage.” -Lucy Lippard, Overlay, 1983

When it comes to managing your anger, you may have heard it recommended to count to ten or to take a timeout and go somewhere for a cooling off period. The problem with such methods is that counting really doesn’t do the trick if you’re still right in the thick of (and staring at, and being stared at by) what set you off in the first place, and oftentimes when you leave to go somewhere else, your anger ends up building instead of dissipating; you start stewing in your room, or you talk to a friend who only eggs you on about how right you are, or you go get drunk which often leads not only to more anger but a whole other set of problems too.

In my experience, the best way to deal with a situation where you’re about to blow your top is to respectfully ask for a time out and then head right out the door to take a walk. As just discussed, walking can alleviate your anxiety and mellow you out. Plus, being alone with your thoughts can help you get perspective on what’s going down and how you really want to deal with it.

Baby won’t stop crying?

baby

When you have a newborn, nothing is more stressful than when they’re on a crying jag and you can’t soothe them. One “home remedy” I personally found highly effective was taking the baby out for a walk. It’s easy when you have one of those carriers that loads right into the stroller. Rolling along in the fresh air acted as a fast and all-natural baby pacifier. Plus, it’s hard for new dads to get exercise in, so this baby-mollification method kills two birds with one stone.

Age catching up with you?

oldman

“When Nero advertised for a new luxury, a walk in the woods should have been offered. It is the consolation of mortal men. I think no pursuit has more breath of immortality in it. It is one of the secrets for dodging old age.” –Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Country Life,” 1858

Emerson was more right than he knew. Modern studies have shown that men who daily walk two miles or more have half the chance of developing dementia and Alzheimer’s disease than men who walk a quarter-mile or less each day. Another study found that people over the age of 60 who walk 6-9 miles a week retain more gray matter and suffer less “brain shrinkage” and cognitive impairment than those who walk less. What’s really interesting is that not only does walking affect your mental faculties, but your mental faculties affect your walking. Researchers have found that as your cognitive abilities decline, your walking gait becomes slower and shakier, so looking at someone’s stride is actually one way to diagnosis those who have or are developing dementia. As the New York Times reports: “Thinking skills like memory, planning activities or processing information decline almost in parallel with the ability to walk fluidly…In other words, the more trouble people have walking, the more trouble they have thinking.”

So hey, those old ladies in windsuits at the mall are on to something after all.

Need to work through a problem with a friend or lover?

walk3

“The roads and paths you have walked along in summer and winter weather, the fields and hills which you have looked upon in lightness and gladness of heart, where fresh thoughts have come into your mind, or some noble prospect has opened before you, and especially the quiet ways where you have walked in sweet converse with your friend, pausing under the trees, drinking at the spring—henceforth they are not the same; a new charm is added; those thoughts spring there perennial, your friend walks there forever.” –John Burroughs, “The Exhilarations of the Road,” 1895

If you and a friend or significant other are grappling with some problem or issue or worry, there may be no better way of working through it than going for a walk together. When you sit face-to-face with someone, the mood can feel confrontational – you may be thinking about not making the “wrong” facial expression instead of the issue at hand, and if you do make the wrong expression, it can set the other person off. When you’re sitting or standing side-by-side, on the other hand, people feel more comfortable and open and less defensive. They can look off into the distance to gather their thoughts, grimace, and bite their lip without self-consciousness.

When you’re side-by-side on a walk, you have this benefit, plus all those mentioned above (stress-reduction, meditation, inspiration) that can enhance your ability to work through a problem with someone. Plus, walking provides the physical sensation of moving forward, which can translate into a mental sense of forward progress as well. The Chinese characters for walking mean putting one foot in front of the other – and that’s really the best way to deal with any dilemma or challenge that besets us.

“Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road,
Healthy, free, the world before me,
The long brown path before me leading wherever I choose.

Henceforth I ask not good-fortune, I myself am good-fortune,
Henceforth I whimper no more, postpone no more, need nothing,
Done with indoor complaints, libraries, querulous criticisms,
Strong and content I travel the open road.”
-Walt Whitman, “A Song of the Open Road”

Related posts:

  1. Dim & Dash: Walking the Dog
  2. Old School Workout: Daily Exercises for Young Men From 1883
  3. Underestimating a Hike
  4. Every Man Should Do This Exercise Routine Every Day
  5. Hero Training: The Carry a Person to Safety Workout
    


23 Apr 01:48

8 Totally Necessary New Punctuation Marks

by uno

A humorous look at some of the punctuation marks missing in the English language.
23 Apr 01:47

The United States of Energy

by Saxum

A regional overview of the nation's energy resources. #USofEnergy
22 Apr 23:53

Pittsburgh brings in more from the outside

by Paul J. Gough
Pittsburgh's economy is getting another boost from a nationally regarded website. Business Insider last week featured an article titled "Why I Moved to Pittsburgh -- The City That Americans are Flocking To Faster Than Anywhere Else." It's an interview with real estate and travel industry consultant Dom Beveridge, who moved to the region because his wife was transferred. Beveridge writes about the oil and gas boom in the region, and why it's driving growth around here. But he also points out the…
13 Apr 14:44

From The Pittsburgh Press, 1933 (via)  On This Day in Pittsburgh...



From The Pittsburgh Press, 1933 (via

On This Day in Pittsburgh History: April 7, 1933 

Prohibition ends in Pennsylvania. 

The Post-Gazette reported: “With a whoop of joy, thousands of parched Pittsburgh throats greeted the end of the Great Dry Era at 12:01 o’clock this morning.” Large crowds milled about outside Pittsburgh breweries waiting for first legalized 3.2 beer. [Historic Pittsburgh

28 Mar 14:29

The World's Neatest Subway Entrance

by John Farrier

subway

subway entrance

This isn't the work of the Hulk, but a clever architect named Zbigniew Peter Pininski. He completed the Bockenheimer Warte station in Frankfurt, Germany in 1986. The Belgian surrealist painter René Magritte inspired Pininski's vision. Have you ever seen it in person?

Link | Photos: Steve Collis/Jcornelius

28 Mar 14:26

Liberty Tire Ghost Sign in Cincinnati

by visualingual

Liberty Tire Ghost Sign in Cincinnati

One of my favorite Cincinnati ghost signs is Liberty Tire on the edge of Northside, at the corner of Elmore St. and Spring Grove Ave. It’s not just a sign; it’s an entire painted building.

Liberty Tire Ghost Sign in Cincinnati

Liberty Tire Ghost Sign in Cincinnati

Is it just me, or is it strange that a business named for liberty advertises using Native American characters?


28 Mar 13:53

The Washington Post's Peep Diorama Contest

by John Farrier

peep

Every year, The Washington Post holds a contest for peep dioramas. You can view a slideshow of the winners at the link. My favorite entry is this one by Sheila Barnett, Kevin Barnett and Nate Tolley. It flips reality over and reveals the truth: we're candy in a peep universe.

Link -via The Hairpin

28 Mar 13:52

Transit tickets sure were pretty in 1937

by BeyondDC Staff

Cool transit find of the week: This Capital Transit Company ticket from exactly 76 years ago, featuring robins and cherry blossoms.

For those keeping score at home, in 1937 it cost $1.25 for a week’s worth of unlimited streetcar and bus rides. Adjusted for inflation, that’s about $20. For comparison, WMATA weekly passes today go for $16 for a bus-only pass, and a little under $60 for a rail pass.


1937 Capital Transit ticket. Photo by u/stampepk on reddit.

 Cross-posted at Greater Greater Washington.
 
 
 

27 Mar 20:20

Jan. 26, 1981: “The world’s skinniest...




Al Kovacik takes his measure of the Skinny Building, which is 5-foot, 2-inches wide. (Post-Gazette photo by Steve Mellon)


A 2006 exhibit, "Pin-Up: A Tribute to the Women of Burlesque." (Post-Gazette photo by Bill Wade)


The building is listed under A.W. Mellon in this 1914 map, found on the Historic Pittsburgh website. (University of Pittsburgh)

Jan. 26, 1981: “The world’s skinniest building”

Pittsburghers love a good rivalry and some say the Skinny Building in Downtown is the skinniest building in the world. At 5 feet 2 inches wide, it may be thinner than the Sam Kee Building in Vancouver, which is 4 feet, 11 inches at its base and 6 feet wide on its second floor.

In the decade that began with 2000, the Skinny Building’s 24 large windows became a great space for visual exhibitions devoted to burlesque queens, the Pittsburgh Steelers and sportscaster Myron Cope. Located just beyond Market Square at 241 Forbes Ave., it is the home of a clothing vendor. The skinny structure snuggles up to its stouter neighbor, the John M. Roberts & Son building. The facades of both structures will soon undergo historic restoration. Both buildings are directly across the street from the $400 million Tower at PNC Plaza skyscraper that is under construction.

Earlier this month, Post-Gazette business writer Mark Belko reported that the city’s Urban Redevelopment Authority plans to pay $1.3 million for the Skinny Building and its neighbor, the John M. Roberts & Son building, former home of a respected jeweler.

The Skinny Building was built around 1901. Albert Kovacik, a local architect who helped stage a series of public art exhibitions there, said it once held a lunch counter with an aisle and a row of stools along Forbes Ave. The space was so narrow that food was prepared on the second floor, where some of the stainless steel counters remain. To see  a picture of the lunch counter, check out The Skinny Building’s Facebook page.

A check of Pittsburgh’s old maps shows that Andrew W. Mellon, a member of the famous banking family, owned the Skinny Building as of 1914. From 1921 to 1932, he served as U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.

While its architect is unknown, the Skinny Building is made of wood, brick and marble. Pittsburgh architect George Rowland designed its neighbor, the John M. Roberts & Son building, a monumental, five-story structure that has a Beaux-Arts facade and dates to 1925.

Buildings in the two blocks of Wood St. that stretch from Fifth Ave. to Fourth Ave. are part of the newly expanded Fourth Ave. National Register District. The Skinny Building and the John M. Roberts building are “contributing structures” in that district.

One recent restoration uncovered the beauty of the Italian Sons and Daughters of America building, located at Wood St. and Forbes Ave. Ugly orange aluminum cladding was removed, revealing glorious stone work, carved eagles and narrow original windows.  Across from the ISDA Building are three cast-iron buildings from the 1880s that were once owned by Henry Clay Frick. Those facades are being restored. A facelift is under way at the Fifth Wood Building, which houses Kashi Jewelers and was designed in 1922 by George Swan.

To see how the Skinny Building has changed, visit the PG’s Pittsburgh Then and Now page.

Marylynne Pitz 

26 Mar 16:00

These photographs capture the terror, joy and weirdness of the USSR's final days

by Vincze Miklós

In the last days of the USSR, the nation was changing incredibly fast. People were starving, but they were also joyfully rebelling against their crumbling government. Communism was slowly eroding into nationalism. These moving photographs capture the moments heralded the end of the Soviet Union.

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