For most of my life, I have been a walker in the darkness.
I come by this naturally: I have been walking around or home in the dark since middle school likely. It was a different time of course; such things were hardly considered remarkable in the town I grew up in. Middle school turned into high school and still I walked. There were long evenings spent with Uisdean Ruadh and The Director and others as we walked down and around the lanes and parks of our neighborhoods, sometimes walking the railroad tracks the three miles that it took to get to my hometown from my house and back again.
I walk in the mornings as well, but mornings are different. They are far busier, with runners and walkers and dog walkers out in force. It is not that anything is necessarily wrong with that - it is just that it creates a different vibe.
The evenings, perhaps unsurprisingly, are different: anytime after 2000 it is only the occasional dog walker and unusual nerd like myself that is out for a stroll.
Things are remarkably quieter as well: most folks are inside their homes (perhaps use the word "Sensible" here), and most transportation has stopped. Only the occasional car goes by: delivery trucks, commuters, garbage trucks - all are gone home for the night.
The biggest difference is sound is simply that there are no birds. Occasionally in New Home I would hear an owl out on the prowl. Not here in New Home 2.0 though. Only the background of the local insect life and frogs hoping for a little night life fill the evening air.
These dark walks were - and are - for me a time of talk and thinking. Over the years of strolling, be they in person or on the phone with a friend, the great issues of the day and the small ones as well were hashed out - if not to conclusion, at least to an expression of opinions.
Over the years I have walked on roads, lanes, paths, high school tracks, sidewalks, dirt roads. Different places we have lived had had different features. The first neighborhood we lived in at New Home had an older mix of homes with older trees and interesting street designs. The second place we live - where we own our home - is a newer neighborhood. The trees are not so tall and the new homes behind our house - just rows of sidewalks and yards.
New Home 2.0, as you can hopefully see, is far more interesting.
For years I pictured myself more a creature of the dark than the day - something that a job that starts early tends to wreak havoc with. I can barely stay up beyond 2200 on a good day anymore; that alarm comes far too early.
Yet I have found that if I fail to walk, it has an impact - on my ability to sleep, on my weight, on my mental health. I do better if I walk in the dark.
So here is to the walkers in the dark, those hardy souls that inhabit the twilight and early night where the stars and lights shine like the lanterns of the Fairy lands, the sounds are mostly natural, and the only monologues or dialogues are those that you bring with you.
I wonder if your experience is the property of an urban environment. Here, I find it much more peaceful walking in the wee hours of the morning versus in the late hours of the evenings. Trying to think about why that is, I guess I can come up with a couple theories. First, unlike urban environments, we don't have any form of mass transportation so everyone has vehicles and thus can go anywhere at any time. Second, we have factories around that have night shifts but typically don't run shifts that stretch into the early hours of the morning.
ReplyDeleteOne of the big reasons I don't like walking at night is that my area has no side walks and narrow roads so walking at night with a fair amount of vehicles still passing by all the time because a safety issue. In the mornings, I do see the same joggers, walkers and pet walkers trying to beat the heat in summer, but not very many vehicles.
Ed, that is quite possible although growing up we were in a much more semi roll environment and I did enjoy walking at night then as well. Also, I have enjoyed walking at The Ranch at night.
DeleteThat said, the sidewalks and lights do make a big difference. Also, especially where I grew up, the places that I used to walk are much more traveled, and in some cases, much less accessible than they once were. For example, I cannot imagine walking a strip of the railroad tracks these days without being checked in on at some point.
Lit sidewalks and general feeling of safety in your area makes a soothing walk for someone that enjoys solitude.
ReplyDeleteHope you never find a wandering nasty as you muse along.
At least rude dogs around here generally growl or give some warning to the alert.
Michael, I suspect I am far more in danger of getting hit by a distracted driver in my daily commute or even driving back-and-forth. I can remain alert for people on my walk; I have very little influence on the drivers around me.
DeleteEstablishing a routine can certainly help that sleep pattern TB, good for you. Walking is certainly a low-impact method of achieving that goal, not to mention getting out of the home. No sidewalks in my neighborhood, putting them in would have upped the assessments from last summer's street reconstruction. Prefer to walk early in the morning, being retired means no job like there used to be. And early morning walks usually translate to potential nasties going home to their lairs, plus a carry permit is a bit reassuring as well. There is a smooth asphalt path around that urban lake two blocks from the homestead, three and a quarter miles round it with a slight elevation on the west side that is lit....well whenever the park department can replace the wiring in the lightpoles.
ReplyDeleteI do sleep better when I walk Nylon12. I have forgotten that to my detriment.
DeleteI will say that overall, having a sidewalk pavement generally makes for a more pleasant role. Certainly less opportunity for twisted ankles or feet.
Your thoughts bring to mind Ray Bradbury's good old short story "The Pedestrian." Watch out for the robot cops!
ReplyDeleteWarren - One of Bradbury's short stories I have read! And you are right, very apropos.
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DeleteNo edit button. Just read The Pedestrian snippet. Very Ray Bradbury, scary.
DeleteMichael, I really should read more Bradbury. His science fiction, at least what I have read, has played out far more than others.
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