WALKING QUOTES IV

quotations about walking

Walking the streets texting isn't much safer than walking them with a blindfold on.

CASEY NEISTAT

op-ed video, New York Times, January 9, 2012


Walking is like the ongoing picking up and straightening up you do in your house every single day. It's not exciting. There's no great benefit at the end. But it must be done.

TAMMY DAVIS

"Life is a Balancing Act", Columbia Star, April 21, 2017


Walking is low cost, can be done throughout the day and is proven to be a great way to improve our brain function. Get out today and take a walk -- your brain will function better.

MARIA BIGELOW

"Take a walk to improve body, brain", Lake Oswego Review


Here's the thing: if you think distracted walking is what's causing more people being killed, ask yourself what happens when two pedestrians collide. Usually nothing. But that's not the case when you add cars and trucks to the mix.

JOSEPH CUTRUFO

"If You Think Distracted Walking Is Dangerous, Ask Yourself What Happens When Two Pedestrians Collide", Mobilizing the Region, March 30, 2017


When we walk, we naturally go to the fields and woods: what would become of us, if we walked only in a garden or a mall? Even some sects of philosophers have felt the necessity of importing the woods to themselves, since they did not go to the woods. They planted groves and walks of Plantanes, where they took subdiales ambulationes in porticos open to the air. Of course, it is of no use to direct our steps to the woods, if they do not carry us thither.

HENRY DAVID THOREAU

Walking

Tags: Henry David Thoreau


I would walk along the quais when I had finished work or when I was trying to think something out. It was easier to think if I was walking and doing something or seeing people doing something that they understood.

ERNEST HEMINGWAY

A Moveable Feast

Tags: Ernest Hemingway


You need special shoes for hiking -- and a bit of a special soul as well.

EMME WOODHULL-BÄCHE

attributed, Hiking and Backpacking


He put on a little knapsack and he walked through Indiana and Kentucky and North Carolina and Georgia clear to Florida. He walked among farmers and mountain people, among swamp people and fishermen. And everywhere people asked him why he was walking through the country. Because he loved true things he tried to explain.

JOHN STEINBECK

Cannery Row

Tags: John Steinbeck


I learned how to walk by doing the moonwalk. I know, you're now picturing me sliding backwards across a polished floor, but no, I don't mean the Michael Jackson moonwalk -- a thing of grace and beauty -- but the charity fundraising MoonWalk: a 26-mile night-time march through London, performed by women in their bras to raise money for breast cancer research. I took part in it a few years ago as part of a fantastically glamorous media team that trained for weeks on end. We'd meet every Sunday and walk beside the Thames, gradually building up distances and endurance, until we were easily covering 20 miles and more. I say easily: I mean huffing and puffing, covered in blisters, and fuelled by Marmite sandwiches -- but still, we did it.

TRACY THORN

"How I learned to walk miles on a midnight marathon across London", New Statesman, January 28, 2016


There is nothing like walking to get the feel of a country. A fine landscape is like a piece of music; it must be taken at the right tempo. Even a bicycle goes too fast.

PAUL SCOTT MOWRER

The House of Europe


Most of the time, driving less and walking more is awesome. Choosing to walk or take transit is an easy way to hit my 10,000 step goal on my Fitbit and helps me think clearer. Plus, I save tons of money and sleep more soundly at night knowing my carbon footprint is probably smaller than others' because I'm not driving everywhere I go.

LIZ CALLIN

"5 Things that Make Walkable Neighborhoods Walkable", Mode Shift, February 4, 2016


Flies travel like they're named. Humans should be called Walks.

JAROD KINTZ

Whenever You're Gone, I'm Here For You


Most of us take walking for granted. In fact, I believe there's a growing movement to get rid of walking altogether. The prevalence of cars, buses, trams and bikes have reduced the need to walk. More to the point: We feel the need to justify walking altogether. Any instance of walking must be accompanied by some kind of crutch -- we need to walk with others, listen to music or find another way to make it productive. We walk to satisfy our Fitbit or step counters so at the end of the day we can look at our badge of honor that says we took 5,000 steps. We've convinced ourselves it's wearisome, that it's a form of procrastination that takes time out of our too-busy schedules. We treat it as if it's wasteful.

JACK PORTER

"People Need to Remember: Walking Is the Best Medicine", The Daily Utah Chronicle, January 27, 2016


Walking is the very best exercise. Habituate yourself to walk very far.

THOMAS JEFFERSON

letter to Peter Carr, Aug. 19, 1785

Tags: Thomas Jefferson


It seems thus possible to give a preliminary definition of walking as a space of enunciation.

MICHEL DE CERTEAU

The Practice of Everyday Life


From the child's first faltering step across the homely carpet, to the astronaut's "one giant stride for mankind" over the alien moon dust, walking is the simplest but most glorious declaration of human independence.

DUNCAN MINSHULL

The Vintage Book Of Walking


Purposeless walking is not without purpose -- it is actually meditation in motion.

BISHWANATH GHOSH

"The World on Foot", The Hindu, February 5, 2016


Being able to walk to shops, restaurants and other amenities enhances the liveability of a community and boosts the residents' enjoyment of living there. Not only does it save the hassle of getting in the car and finding parking but walking is a more enjoyable experience and you can more easily take advantage of living in a desirable, well-designed village where people want to be.

JONATHAN PORTER

"Brisbane's new development a masterclass in urban planning", Australian Financial Review, February 5, 2016


Walking is the only form of transportation in which a man proceeds erect -- like a man -- on his own legs, under his own power. There is immense satisfaction in that.

EDWARD ABBEY

Postcards from Ed

Tags: Edward Abbey


Walking is a technique of solitude, a way into reverie. The walker is not a sleepwalker but a daydreamer.

DEIRDRE HEDDON

Walking, Writing and Performance