200 Words A Day archive for 2 full years. 731 days of unbroken consecutive days of writing. 7 Dec 2018 - 8 Dec 2020. I now write daily on https://golifelog.com

"Solvitur ambulando." It is solved by walking.??‍♂️

“Solvitur ambulando.” In Latin, this loosely translates as “It is solved by walking.” 

This Quartzy article about a new book Afoot and Lighthearted by Bonnie Whitehouse, paints it out well:

“For many years, I have wondered how, in the frantic pace of this age we call our time, I might keep my focus on what nourishes me,” the professor writes. “I decided that, like many creative walkers before me, I had to disrupt habits that neither fed or sustained me by radically and literally walking away from them.”

And indeed, recently I find myself unknowingly doing this for my work. I find walking especially useful for untying thinking knots. I was stuck between 2 choices recently - continuing on my product, or start something else, even for a while. Part of me wanted to be disciplined and make good on shipping and launching products, yet the other part of me wanted to flow with my energy and curiosity, enjoy my work in the moment, and do something else. Initially, I simply sat and sat on these 2 choices, facing my laptop screen, my notebooks. And going nowhere with the decision. Sitting still in rumination and reflection, it seems, isn’t enlightening in this case. 

So I packed up, kept the issue at the back of my mind, and walked. I chose to walk through some malls, and a few train stops down towards my eventual commute home. And the switch up in energy and motion did help. With blood running, limbs moving while the brain is in energy-saving mode, it actually aided the decision-making. Kind of like walking meditation, which my teacher Thich Nhat Hanh had taught tirelessly about.

Such is the irony and contrast between what my work requires of me versus what how I work best. Coding, designing and being an indie maker seems to entail lots of sitting down in front of a computer, yet my body, soul, spirit, whatever you call it, yearns to work while moving. How can I find the balance? At least, I’m grateful that this new season of work is allowing me to find ways to explore and experiment with that balance. Freed from any client commitments, I can now do as I need, as my body, soul, spirit needs. 

And in walking, I am free and freed. Free to let it unfold and unkink through movement. Freed to better solve whatever the problem of the moment.

The 19th Century Danish philosopher, Soren Kierkegaard - one of my favourite Continental philosophers - couldn’t have described it better: 

“Above all, do not lose your desire to walk: Every day I walk myself into a state of well-being and walk away from every illness; I have walked myself into my best thoughts and I know of no thought so burdensome that one cannot walk away from it.”