Entry tags:
[cities & me]
So, I'm attempting to explain why cities scare me as much as they do (and they do! Boston used to scare me. Now, I just mostly avoid driving in it and I'm fine), and thought it needed a wider audience than in the comment I made.
A major portion of my fear of cities is that they are so overwhelming that I cannot process well enough to figure out how to get where I want to go - no matter _how_ simple the instructions are. Combine with this my complete lack of direction sense, and the fact that I need at least 3 times navigating something, within a fairly small amount of time, before I have any hope of being able to repeat it again myself (detailed written instructions help), and I've got a pretty major handicap in larger cities. Smaller ones simply have fewer options, so are less overwhelming.
I can - now - generally manage to figure out unfamiliar public transportation, with a _lot_ of advance research, to the point where I know exactly where I need to go and all the steps to get there, before I have to do it. I cannot navigate things on the fly unless I'm already familiar enough with most of the necessary steps, or I have insanely detailed instructions. Public transportation (with the notable exception of busses in a city, which tend to have far more available options) tends to have a fairly limited selection of where it goes, and a fair number of the online sites for these places will tell you how to get from point A to point B. This makes it _much_ more managable for me than driving (or walking!) in a strange city.
I know that I'm bad at this kind of thing, which means that trying to do it _scares_ me. I'm more willing now to _try_, at least, but it's still terrifying. And I think that the amount of time that I spend in Greater Boston is _why_ I'm more willing to try. I've gotten used to it, once, with lots of help.
I doubt I'll ever _like_ a large city, but I can get better at navigating with sufficient help, time, and patience.
[edit: I have found, living near Boston, that I like being _near_ cities, because they give me lots of things I can do, at the same time as having a reasonable distance to and amount of natural settings. I did _not_ enjoy growing up in a place with nothing interesting (to me) to do...]
A major portion of my fear of cities is that they are so overwhelming that I cannot process well enough to figure out how to get where I want to go - no matter _how_ simple the instructions are. Combine with this my complete lack of direction sense, and the fact that I need at least 3 times navigating something, within a fairly small amount of time, before I have any hope of being able to repeat it again myself (detailed written instructions help), and I've got a pretty major handicap in larger cities. Smaller ones simply have fewer options, so are less overwhelming.
I can - now - generally manage to figure out unfamiliar public transportation, with a _lot_ of advance research, to the point where I know exactly where I need to go and all the steps to get there, before I have to do it. I cannot navigate things on the fly unless I'm already familiar enough with most of the necessary steps, or I have insanely detailed instructions. Public transportation (with the notable exception of busses in a city, which tend to have far more available options) tends to have a fairly limited selection of where it goes, and a fair number of the online sites for these places will tell you how to get from point A to point B. This makes it _much_ more managable for me than driving (or walking!) in a strange city.
I know that I'm bad at this kind of thing, which means that trying to do it _scares_ me. I'm more willing now to _try_, at least, but it's still terrifying. And I think that the amount of time that I spend in Greater Boston is _why_ I'm more willing to try. I've gotten used to it, once, with lots of help.
I doubt I'll ever _like_ a large city, but I can get better at navigating with sufficient help, time, and patience.
[edit: I have found, living near Boston, that I like being _near_ cities, because they give me lots of things I can do, at the same time as having a reasonable distance to and amount of natural settings. I did _not_ enjoy growing up in a place with nothing interesting (to me) to do...]
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But that way, I'd also miss a lot of gorgeous days and neat people.
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This is all reminding me that I am well overdue for an extended urban wander! this weekend shall be spent in quiet-ish things like doing my laundry and making my cold go away, but soon soon soon I must find a neighborhood in Seattle to wander about in, and maybe get lost.
I really want to get a digital camera in the near future, and spend some weekends wandering about in an industrial area, taking pictures of stained and rusted things :)
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I'm not a big fan ofI detest cold rain. I rather like warm rain, but I'm typically carrying paper objects.Whee wander!
*nods* I should pick up a digital camera, but then I think I might get too caught up in it. Plus there's a benefit to appreciating the view rather than focusing on "getting the best picture for the future".
Have you seen
Urban decay
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I've found nifty things that way. Like, while trying to follow my map to find a place to swim - I failed at the finding a decent place to swim (although I found a crappy one), but I found a nifty place to walk around in.
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Not all those who wander are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.
From the ashes a fire shall be woken,
A light from the shadows shall spring;
Renewed shall be blade that was broken,
The crownless again shall be king.
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I know. :)
But if I wander, I'm almost certain to _get_ lost. Thus, maps.
(yay, quotes!)
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(Yayer, quotes!)
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but getting lost terrifies me, at least if I'm alone. And I'm much better than I used to be!
That said, I do like _wandering_ in a city, if I have time, and a known starting location. And maps. Lots and lots of maps.
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Getting lost is usually the latter for me, but that's a mileage varying kind of thing :) Because of course, the key is telling which fears are which sort(with way different answers for everyone of course), and hindsight's always 20/20 there it sometimes seems.
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If I have maps of the places I am in, and there are street signs, the fear is _there_, but not disabling. And I can work through it well enough.
I _know_ part of it is simply that I got lost _so_ often as a child. It's a bit of leftover reaction, at least to some extent, because I _am_ much better about getting lost than I used to be.
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What kind of maps? Local area? Entire city? Subway maps?
Because if they are only of the local area, and I've somehow managed to get myself far enough away from the place I'm staying, that won't help me. :)
I'm also terrible at remembering directions, which may be my trouble mentioned above with getting lost alone, while walking - I may not have anything to write directions down in.
But, noted.
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Kyoto is largely shaped like a wheel, with spokes radiating outward from the center. What was nifty for getting oriented was that many street corners seemed to feature a metal compass embedded in the cement. This allowed me to always figure out which was north when I was bewildered, which helped enormously. Weirdly enough, my Wicca 101 studies helped me a lot too, because they made me figure out which way was north, south, east and west a lot by way of trying to cast circles in parks I didn't know :) Somehow that translated eventually into overall better sense of which way was north, most of the time, which does help.
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Unfamiliar places still cause big problems though.
I grew up primarily in a spoked city, but there were no handydandy metal compasses to be had.
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But not regularly.
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*nodnod*
I also like small towns with colleges/universities, but that's when I'm attending college and there's 8 bazillion things to do.
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But
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NYC isn't a city IMO, it's a whole universe of its own :)
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I don't know why I call it a town, though... perhaps because it no longer scares me?
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Buildings looming over you and all. ;)
I'm just used to smaller scale things, and more greenspace, and the like.
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I'm just used to smaller scale things, and more greenspace, and the like.
Yep. Ditto. Adjusting to living near and visiting Boston was interesting.
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Whoa..
I grew up in Crystal Springs, MS. When we moved there I was 3. There was one red light in the town. Literally, people would give directions according to that one red light. There was one big church in town, the mayor walked his dog around and mowed his own lawn, there were 6 cops. The high school I graduated from in the next town over (because we lived in the country and had moved to a place right over the county line), a public highschool mind you, had 57 graduating seniors.
Big cities are scary!!!!
I've been commuting this week by subway (and twice by commuter rail/subway combos) and I'm so proud of myself for managing to not get on the wrong train yet!
As my mom said "You're like a real, big city commuter now, like in the movies!"
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I actually didn't grow up in _that_ small a town (as compared to your example, at least), but I got lost so often and easily than I pretty much didn't go anywhere by myself while there. This makes it difficult to get used to navigating. I refused to learn to drive until I was 21 because it _terrified_ me, but it has improved my independance and my ability to navigate (not to an amazing extent, but at least now I _can_ do so without immense ammounts of terror).
Yes. Big cities are scary.
Commuter rail is more annoying to get on the wrong train. I have not yet, but the fact that it runs _so_ much less often makes such a bigger problem. I also tend to avoid commuter rail, since I have a car, and it takes a _lot_ longer, and tends to not run when I would want to use it.
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You? Never! *snerk*
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You find the _strangest_ things, you know that?
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