sparr: (Default)
Clarence "Sparr" Risher ([personal profile] sparr) wrote2008-07-31 12:21 am

What is wrong with walking?

Inspired by this thread.

Americans, particularly of the non-"country" variety, seem to have a horrible ingrained bias against walking. Ignore the truly lazy and obese folks, who this rant is not particularly aimed at; I am talking about people capable of walking a couple of miles without hurting themselves who are simply turned off by the concept of walking more than the physical act.

The trip from your parking spot to the front door of a theater, mall, or anything else with a large lot can easily be a quarter mile. The mostly-indoor path from the front door of the Hyatt to the back door of the Hilton at Dragon*Con is over half a mile. A circuit of the typical mall on a shopping trip, especially if you include aisle-by-aisle coverage of a few department stores, can easily involve multiple miles of walking. These are things you do not think twice about doing, you are at point A, then ten minutes or two hours later you are at point B, no big deal...

But then someone actually suggests out loud that you do something that involves walking a half, or heaven forbid whole, mile. Are they crazy? Absolutely out of the question, what respectable person actually walks anywhere these days? Suddenly this thing that you do voluntarily on a daily basis becomes anathema, not even worth considering.

This is part of a larger problem involving people who unreasonably avoid public transit, refuse to take Greyhound or Amtrak, etc. What has gone wrong with our culture to cause this? How can we fix it?

[identity profile] pwrmacjedi.livejournal.com 2008-07-31 04:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, well put. I admit to sometimes being "that guy" but I tend to be a hell of a lot more open. I am also demanding of some service and quality, though, and you've seen my transit struggles with both. For me, the cleanliness and/or time constraints are all the would be left in a perfect world. Otherwise, you are right - it's a mid game. Americans have really become fucked up on the topic, and I think there are some interesting mental layers to it - including but not limited to - social psychology concepts.

Not sure how many answers I have to the questions posed, but I share them.