this too
Tuesday, January 17, 2006
  Walking a thousand miles



I’ve been inspired by Tom Montag, The Middlewesterner. Well, I’m usually inspired by Tom – by his writing and his love of home. But this time I was inspired by his exercise programme. He and his marathon-runner daughter, Jess, who walked a marathon together last year, had a brilliantly motivating idea. They’ve made a commitment to walking (Tom) or running (Jess) one thousand miles in 2006.

That’s just less than 20 miles a week, and it got me thinking. For several months now I’ve been aiming to walk some of the way to and from work each day. From Elephant and Castle , the concrete-jungle roundabout at the South-Eastern edge of Central London, to my office just North of Waterloo Bridge (worth waiting if this takes a minute to download) is about 2 miles each way. In practice, I’ve only been walking it a couple of times a week. But, hey: 4 miles a day, 5 days a week, that’s… Yes, I could very feasibly do one thousand miles in a year! There’ll surely be days when I don’t walk it both ways, because I’m ill or late or have a lot to carry. But there’ll be all the weekends, when I also walk a lot, since I don’t have a car. I COULD DO THIS.

So on my return to work after the long Christmas/New Year holiday, I began.
Stats so far (to be updated weekly):

Week 1

miles walked: 18 (target: 20)
miles remaining: 982

Week 2
miles walked: 24.5
total walked: 42.5 (target: 40)
miles remaining: 957.5

I was tired and took a day off from walking on Sunday. I missed it. I feel my body falling into the rhythm, just as it falls into the stillness of meditation.

I’m slow! Two miles take me 35 minutes. But it was even slower when I started two weeks ago. I’d rather be walking on quiet open roads, like Tom. But London is a good city for walking – decent pavements everywhere, though much time is spent waiting at crossing lights.


So, what with the walking and the meditation and the diet, it’s all rampant self-improvement. This gives me pause. After all, meditation, my primary commitment, is about self-acceptance, not self-improvement; being present, not constantly aspiring; believing that I’m fine as I am and everything’s fine as it is, and thus, paradoxically, creating space for movement as well as for stillness. The potential for self-absorption is alarming also. I hope awareness of these contradictions will mitigate them. I hope this is about feeling better - not different, not fixated on the future, but more present and more me; not more in-turned, but lighter and more available to life. We’ll see. I hope I can do this. One thousand miles in 2006.
 
Comments:
Oh, my - this is terrific. You CAN do it! If a big, overweight grumble-bear like me can do it, you can too. It's not the walking that's the hard part, it's the getting ready to walk. I try not to think about it til I'm about a mile and a half down the road, and by then it feels pretty good. I hope you keep reporting your progress here.
 
Hmm. I'm also 50-odd and overweight, Tom! I'm going to give it my best shot, anyway. And will report back here.
 
Hooray!!! Just as Tom said, you CAN do it...heck, you already are!

And you *are* fine as you are...which is why improving is necessary. Oh, yes, I know...that sounds like a contradiction, but it's not.

When you realize you're a complete & wonderful creature (perfect, actually), you realize you should treat yourself that way. So the improvements are just your actions catching up with your realization: "I'm fine just as I am...so I should take better care of myself!"

Did I already say Hooray? :-)
 
This is very admirable. For me, walking is more pleasure than work, but as Tom says, it's the getting going part that can be the challenge. I think winter is the best time to start, because the cold air is so clean and envigorating. It's in the middle of a hot, humid summer that I become house-bound.

Don't knock slow walking. I think it's virtually as good for you as walking fast, as long as you cover the same amount of ground. And you see so much more when you take your time.
 
Walking a thousand miles, something beautiful to that, like the thousand petalled lotus opening in the consciousness. I love walking, and really feel it if I haven't had a 2 or 3 hour walk in a week. I had no idea what a great form of excercise it is until I went dancing once after a long hiatus and discovered I had as much energy and stamina as if I danced regularly and knew it could only be due to the walking. Kudos to you, enjoy every step... xo
 
I love walking too. Have you discovered walking meditation? If not, there's some good info here http://www.wildmind.org/meditation/walking/overview.html. Difficult in London traffic perhaps, especially at first, but maybe feasible at weekends. I enjoy walking meditation very much (although I don't do it often enough, but hey, let's not dwell on that!) and I think it might provide a useful link for you between self-acceptance and self-improvement. And I find it's not so self-absorbing as the sitting down kind - for me it enhances my awareness of my self in the world, rather than my self inside me.
 
"I'm fine just as I am...so I should take better care of myself!"
Lorianne said it better than ever I could.

Jean, what a wonderful achievement this will be. The Year of One Thousand Miles.

Goals aside, the doing of it will be wonderful. And very in keeping with the process you've discussed of being where you are.
 
I second Zinnia on the walking meditation.

It's my favorite form of meditation, especially if I carry a camera with me.

Good luck.
 
you go girl - what an inspiration for this on-again-off-again walker

I'm a bit late starting for the 1,000 miles, but I think I can catch up ... have a few miles logged on my diary/day book, so I'm not exactly starting from zero

and I'm older than you are ... don't want to be young and beautiful again ... just "take better care of myself"
 
Post a Comment

<< Home

My Photo
Name:
Location: London, UK

Freelance copy-editor and translator. Keen on language, literature, photography, art, music, buddhist meditation and the countryside.

ARCHIVES
February 2005 / March 2005 / April 2005 / May 2005 / June 2005 / July 2005 / August 2005 / September 2005 / October 2005 / November 2005 / December 2005 / January 2006 / February 2006 / March 2006 / April 2006 / May 2006 /


BLOGS I READ
Powered by Blogger