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Walk This Way

Walk This Way

Walk wherever you are (indoors or outdoors) and connect online. Leave feeling recharged with simple, doable actions.

​An online coaching walk series run by Pip Club’s Community and open to all.

​Walking is fantastic for our physical and mental health. This one-hour online walk goes a step further to give you:

​Space to breathe and be mindful
​Time to connect, chat and laugh
​You will need:

​A smartphone and earphones. (Video is optional)
​Somewhere relatively quiet with good connectivity outdoors (or indoors) that you feel safe to wander.

Walk This Way November: Pace Yourself

​Explore how you pace yourself to be productive and resilient.

This event has happened

2022-11-03 17:00
2022-11-03 17:00
2022-11-03 17:00

Hosted by: Anise Bullimore
Online

coaching

Collection · 8 items
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Mental Health

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Walk This Way

Join this one hour online walk with the Pip Decks Community, to gain space to breathe, be mindful, connect, chat, and laugh.

Anise Bullimore
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Walk This Way

Join this one hour online walk with the Pip Decks Community, to gain space to breathe, be mindful, connect, chat, and laugh.

Anise Bullimore
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Out Lines – walk | listen | journal

Walk the new year in with a difference! Does January feel endless and stodgy?  Want to kickstart fun into January? Walk this way! Step into fresh thinking this January.  Harness the vitality of walking with the power of journaling.

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Experiment: Pay by walking

We're running an experiment: Over the next few months, you can pay for tickets to our cafés by walking.

Babak Fakhamzadeh

pedestrian acts

By de Certeau: In “Walking in the City”, de Certeau conceives pedestrianism as a practice that is performed in the public space, whose architecture and behavioural habits substantially determine the way we walk. For de Certeau, the spatial order “organises an ensemble of possibilities (e.g. by a place in which one can move) and interdictions (e.g. by a wall that prevents one from going further)” and the walker “actualises some of these possibilities” by performing within its rules and limitations. “In that way,” says de Certeau, “he makes them exist as well as emerge.” Thus, pedestrians, as they walk conforming to the possibilities that are brought about by the spatial order of the city, constantly repeat and re-produce that spatial order, in a way ensuring its continuity. But, a pedestrian could also invent other possibilities. According to de Certeau, “the crossing, drifting away, or improvisation of walking privilege, transform or abandon spatial elements.” Hence, the pedestrians could, to a certain extent, elude the discipline of the spatial order of the city. Instead of repeating and re-producing the possibilities that are allowed, they can deviate, digress, drift away, depart, contravene, disrupt, subvert, or resist them. These acts, as he calls them, are pedestrian acts.

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