tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28456983.post115643191314059140..comments2023-08-13T02:58:11.090-07:00Comments on The Healing Nest Blog Archive: When You're Stuck, MoveCourtney Putnamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17134445555527421256noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28456983.post-1156480766476278682006-08-24T21:39:00.000-07:002006-08-24T21:39:00.000-07:00Thank you for your post, Ned. I was able to fix th...Thank you for your post, Ned. I was able to fix the comment issue and have included your message below.<BR/><BR/>How lovely that your walk after work was so therapeutic. It's powerful to see how far you've traveled, too!<BR/><BR/>I love the idea of physically gaining a new perspective when I feel stuck, too. In college, I took a course called, "Dreams, Imagination, and Creativity," and one of our assignments was to walk a different way to class every day in order to "see anew" and gain another perspective. <BR/><BR/>I'm curious what those towers you observed made you think about. Were they oppressive or physically unattractive? Or something else entirely?<BR/><BR/>Courtney<BR/> <BR/>* * * *<BR/>Ned said...<BR/><BR/> Welcome to your new blog incarnation. Tried to comment on the movement posting, but no way to!<BR/><BR/> I used to live about a 20-minute walk from work, and it was such a nice transition between work and home to have that walk.<BR/><BR/> One year I lived a 15-minute walk, 30-minute train ride and 15-minute walk or 5-minute drive from work. When I got off the train you could see the big towers that tower over the square where the school is, and while I always said I hated seeing them, I think also I liked see how far I'd travelled away from work.Courtney Putnamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03677715903439414722noreply@blogger.com