Urban Pathfinding

published in the Christian Science Monitor, September 1990

“Continuing straight ahead with blue markers, the trail descends at a fair grade through the conifer forest, crosses a brook, comes to a level stretch and passes a spring. Still descending moderately, a marshy tributary is crossed after which the trail reaches the right bank of the Opalescent River and crosses it on stones.'

- Directions from Avalanche Camp to Feldspar Brook, from Guide to Adirondack Trails

For a big-city resident like myself, pathfinding is quite a different problem  than  that faced by a hiker through the Adirondack Mountains. And even more different for a boy from the Mis­souri woods, where I once played. After living in New York for some 10 years now, I've learned that getting from here to there takes more than just following blue markers straight ahead, descending moderately, and crossing a river on stones.

It takes the ability to find and keep a single path through the mind before even setting out the door. What seems the inexorable linearity of tramping along a for­est trail becomes on city sidewalks a constantly shifting challenge to my original intentions. Walking down Fifth Avenue past million­ dollar boutiques and homeless people sharing the same block, how many times have I found myself asking, "Now where am I going?" If I weren't perfectly sure at the outset, I doubt I would ever arrive.

Although some may disagree,  I think people are far more likely to dally in a bookstore than beside a marshy tributary. A flashy dis­play in a store window  catches our attention longer than a coni­ fer  forest ever could.  I even think that  spotting  a Greta  Garbo out for a walk would stop us in our tracks faster and harder than suddenly catching the view of the Opalescent River.

 When I was young I lived next to some woods laced with many trails. Mos t of them ran sharply downhill toward the Missouri River, and each had a name. "Broken Tooth," famous for a sledding accident whose victim was long forgotten. "Smiley's, " in honor of the judge who  once lived at the bottom of its first dip. And "Living Bridge," which  had a gigantic oak tree, miraculously still living, blown across its steep gully.

I  hiked  through  those  woods all day, finding it pure pleasure to set off at the upper end of the run, knowing that at the bottom I would be stopped by a river too wide  to be crossed  on stones.

And. the trail really did lead straight ahead . especially in the summer when the undergrowth on both sides was so dense I could only see frontward. When the de­scent finally smoothed to the level, I knew I'd arrived where I wanted to go.

But 25 years later I'm not cer­tain if all those trails are still clear, I can't say if the "Living Bridge" is even still alive. It has been too long since I've set off down a path with that kind of foreknowledge, sure of how to get there and what I'll find when I do.

I wonder if living in the city is somehow the reason for this un­certainty. Or is it that my life now has too many paths toward too many goals?

I'd like to think it is the citv's fault  that  pathfinding   is  not  as easy now as it once was , because I've always intended to leave any­way. Move back to the country and  follow again a single trail. But I realize it has more  to  do  with who I am rather than where I live. After several career changes and with a family I too often ignore because my mind is elsewhere , I know the problem is mine,  not New York's.

So I can't in all honesty blame complicated subway line s and bus routes whenever I lose my way. Streets in New  York  are  marked at least as well as trails in the Adirondacks. And here  the y  are all numbered , so I have eve n less reason for getting lost.

When in midstride I suddenly forget where it is I'm going, it must be because I've forgotten something more important be­ fore setting out.

No, I can't blame that on where I live. The problem is the pathfinder , not the path.