On December 16, I strapped a Fitbit onto my left wrist
where—save for swimming and showers and the occasional reboot—it’s stayed ever
since. I’ve always walked. I like to walk, even in cold weather, though I
dislike wind and cold. I bought a Fitbit (hereinafter “Fitbit”) because I
wanted to track how much I was walking and when, and how that translated into
miles and calories and health.
If the scale is right, I’ve lost five pounds. I’m sleeping a
lot better, too, according to Fitbit. It measures that, too. But what Fitbit
doesn’t measure is mental health and how that translates into creative
well-being, because I’ve noticed an uptick—no, a spike—in that.
So many writers are walkers. Wallace Stevens never learned
to drive and so walked the two miles to and from his work as an insurance
executive in Hartford, Connecticut. His neighbors say he would “walk
differently” from night to night, even backing up to repeat his steps as he
worked out the words in his head. Cheryl Strayed took a 1,000-plus mile hike
and writes (famously) about it in her book Wild. Virginia Woolf and James Joyce set
their respective characters on walking journeys through London and Dublin.
But what is it about walking and its link to creativity?
According to Ferris Jabr, in his article for The New Yorker “Why Walking Helps Us Think”:
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Because it is winter in New York, I usually walk with my
head down. There is ice on the sidewalks and the roads where I walk, secret ice
under the thin layer of snow that is there on early mornings. I don’t want to
fall, so I walk carefully and sometimes slowly, always with my head down so I
can see what’s ahead. The upside of this is the money I find, coins of all
denominations usually coated with road salt or mud.
Money is money. The coins go into a red plastic pig that I’ll
empty at the end of the year and count up, tangible evidence of what I’ve
gained in twelve months of walking.