ILLUSTRATION: PIETARI POSTI 1. UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO
022 RUNNERSWORLD.CO.UK JUNE 2018
come in from my run grinning with the pleasure of it.
âWhere did you go?â asks my husband Jeff. Weâre on holiday
and just getting to know our surroundings.
âDown the zigzag track then up the path that turns back on
itself and through that dingly dell.â
He looks blankly at me.
âDown the zigzags...â I begin again.
âYes I know the zigzagsâ he says impatiently.
âThen up the path that takes a hairpin bend off the road...â
His eyes f loat upwards: heâs following my route in his head.
âThen through that bit with the overhanging branches covered in moss.â
This evidently doesnât tally with his own mental map so he asks âWhich
path did you take out of the clearing?â
âWhat clearing?â
âAt the top of the path thereâs a clearing with three different trails off it.
Which did you take?â
âI donât knowâ I shrug as if it doesnât matter â although I feel as if Iâve
failed some kind of test. âIt felt like straight on to me.â
By now both our moods have soured. But itâs not our fault that we canât
share this visual joyride. We simply see the world differently â and the
map that each of us has created of this place in our mindâs eye is unique.
Mental maps arenât clinical like paper ones. They are shaped not by 2cm
squares but by the experiences we accrue as we run: hereâs where I felt
scared by the remoteness of the trail; this is the route I ran the last weekend
I saw my nan before she died. We donât just run a route we engage with it.
What intrigues me though is what each of us senses in a landscape â
what landmarks we choose to plot our journey. Research has shown that
navigation develops new grey matter in the part of the brain responsible
for complex spatial representation. In a 2006 study London taxi drivers
- tasked with holding an entire
âA to Zâ of maps in their heads â
were found to have more grey
matter in this region of the brain.
Jeff orienteered at a national
level as a junior before taking
degrees in geography and town
planning. Itâs no wonder he sees
landscapes in terms of topography
and compass points. I spent most of
my childhood getting lost â literally
or with my head in a book â and I
still find it hard to recreate even my
most well trodden running routes
in my mindâs eye. I can picture the
beginnings and ends and recall
random landmarks â a majestic oak
a dead owl a discarded teddy â but
some of the middle miles are missing.
Itâs the equivalent of losing your
GPS signal in a tunnel.
However dodgy my mental maps
are though I can trust my feet to
link together the missing pieces
once Iâm out there. And thankfully
itâs not because Iâm relying on GPS
which scientists believe may erode
our mind-mapping skills. When
Japanese researchers^1 tested the
navigational prowess of their
subjects on six routes using either
GPS a paper map or direct
experience they found those using
GPS made the most mistakes and
afterwards were the least able to
sketch a map of where theyâd been.
Other researchers have voiced
concerns that GPS is causing us to
disengage from our environment.
A couple of days after ânav-gateâ
Jeff and I are running together
through dense forest and we keep
losing the path. âAh itâs this wayâ
I suddenly say confident because
Iâve run this way before on my own
and remember having to crawl
through the mud under a fallen
branch. âDo you think you came
this far?â Jeff asks doubtfully.
âYes. I remember seeing a Diet
Coke can on the ground.â
Moments later we pass the can.
WHAT SAM...
Attended...
The Balanced
Runner's
Feldenkrais
and running
workshop in
London with
Jae Gruenke
(balancedrunner.
com).
Ran...
A half marathon
in which I was
neck and neck
for much of the
way with a man
in Donald Trump
fancy dress.
To o k p a r t i n ...
The London
Peaks Relay â
the challenge
thought up by
RWâs own Rick
Pearson to race
to the highest
point in every
London borough
in under 24 hours
- a distance
of 150 miles
(see p36).
I
Mu r ph yâs L o r e
BY SAM MURPHY
WE DONâT JUST RUN A ROUTE
WE ENGAGE WITH IT