The Rucksack, the Drift, and the Thinking Walk

I have been thinking about walking. This week has clarified something about why.

You stay alive to your life by staying in motion. The physical motion is part of it. The attention staying awake is the larger part. The question underneath: Do you have a practice that holds? A real one, lived rather than intended, that keeps the self porous and curious and in genuine contact with the actual world.

This is what Japhy Ryder understood. In The Dharma Bums, he has a vision: thousands of young Americans walking into the mountains with rucksacks on their backs, refusing the dream of the box, the car, the television flickering in every window at the same hour on every street. The rucksack on the back is proof of something. You’ve got what you need. You can go anywhere. The road is still there.

Guy Debord called the drift the dérive. The unplanned walk that follows what the Situationists called psychogeographic pulls: the alley that looks interesting, the hill appearing over rooftops, the smell you can’t identify that makes you turn left. The environment has its own intelligence. The dérive asks you to submit to it for a while. Go out without a destination. Come back having been somewhere you didn’t plan to go.

These two traditions, Kerouac’s rucksack revolution and Debord’s dérive, have always sat in separate rooms in my mind. One is wilderness, one is urban. One is spiritual, one is political. But this week I see what they share: both are practices of refusal. Both insist that the narrowing is a choice.

The wisdom walk is the thread that connects them. The older, quieter idea that walking itself is a form of thinking. That the body in motion produces a quality of attention that the desk can’t replicate. That ideas arrive on the path that won’t come any other way. Thoreau knew it. The Peripatetics knew it. The pilgrim walking to the Holy Land, à la Sainte Terre, knew it. Thoreau traced the word saunter back to those pilgrims. Every walk is a pilgrimage if you take it seriously enough.

This morning, before the day got going, I spent a few hours with Claude working on the about page, the worldview piece, and the values. The shape of things has never felt clearer. The vault as the living memory layer. Notes, fragments, essays, experiments. The snapshot photography coming back. The narrative alchemy coaching. The text-based ontologist stepping fully into the role: language as the primary instrument, the web as the native medium, the walk as the thinking engine.

At fifty-seven, I wrote: Act III is the reclamation. At fifty-eight, watching Roger leave with the top down and sitting with what this week has been, I understand it more bodily than I did. The cosmic dancer surrenders to the rhythm of the turning wheel. Actively, with great intention, having seen what the alternative looks like.

The rucksack revolution belongs to anyone who understands what the alternative looks like.

The recipe: go out without a fixed route. Carry what you need and nothing more. Let the environment pull you where it wants. Follow the thought that arrives. Trust that the thinking will happen if you stay present to it.

The walk is the answer. It has always been the answer. The question is whether you take it.

I’m going home to the Midlands this afternoon. Back to the flatlands.