It’s hard to imagine how I could have done a worse job keeping up with my fancy “Place Blog” idea, but I would still like to share some of the highlights of my time in the Phoenix area. I’ve been in Mesa (just east of Phoenix) since January 5th and I will be leaving on the morning of March 27th. For the most part, I’ve really enjoyed this trip.
I was able to find a furnished, one-bedroom apartment less than a block away from where I work. (I have a perfect view of the shuffleboard court.) It has been a much more comforting experience, having my own place as opposed to living out of an Extended Stay America. It feels nice to “come home” and not have to walk through the lobby.
The weather here has been amazing. Nearly every day has been perfectly sunny with a high in the 70s and a low in the 50s. The clear sky lends itself to spectacular sunsets and an intense display of stars.
Mesa, while not a small town in terms of population, has an unmistakably small-town feel. The people here are very friendly and the culture is very relaxed. Dressing up, for a lot of these folks, means putting on your black cowboy boots and tucking in your shirt.
On my very short drive (or walk) to work every morning, I see Superstition Mountain looming large at the edge of town. Beyond it is the Tonto National Forest, which is nearly 3 million acres of total wilderness. Not only is it beautiful to see mountains every day (not something I am used to in Florida), but I am reminded constantly of all the hiking and exploring there is to do before I leave. There is a part of me that would love to ditch everything I know and spend years hiking through the wild alone. That part of me has been very excited here.
My biggest disappointment/ regret is not having shipped my motorcycle from Tampa to Mesa. It would have been pretty costly, but the perfect weather combined with the beautiful scenic roads winding through the desert mountains has attracted a large biker crowd to the area. You can’t step outside without seeing (and hearing) a group of bikers headed for the mountains to take advantage of the perfect weather and routes. Arizona has been great. Arizona on a motorcycle would have been even better.
MAPS The absolute best way to begin understanding where you are is to understand the map of where you are. Understanding the layout of a location allows you to start making meaningful connections between meaningful locations. True understanding (of anything) requires a grasp of context, and, in terms of traveling, what happens between destinations is the context. It is one thing to visit a particular point of interest. It is an entirely different and more fulfilling thing to understand why this point of interest is where it is and why, if it were somewhere else, it would be an entirely different thing.
There are two easy ways to familiarize yourself with the map of a new place.
Every time you get back from visiting something, trace out your route on the map. Seeing where you actually went will give you a sense of distance and direction.
Just stare at the map for a while. Look for anything that stands out as abnormal and figure out what it is. So much information can be gathered this way If the city is laid out on a grid, figure out the logic of that grid. What are the individual neighborhoods within the city (historic, academic, ethnic)?
Let’s use Manhattan as an example. (Refer to this map while reading the rest of the article)
New York City is laid out on a grid of 800 ft. x 200 ft. blocks. But, as you can see, there are breaks in the system. Many of theseexceptions to the system mark the most famous sights in NYC.
The long diagonal street running across the island is Broadway. Aside from being the location for the most famous stage performances in the world, Broadway is also one of the streets that runs through Times Square. You’ll notice also that Broadway creates these strange triangle shaped blocks by cutting through the normal grid. These triangular lots are the locations for many interesting buildings including the very famous Flatiron Building.
The massive rectangle of space with winding roads towards the top of the map is Central Park.
Towards the bottom of the island, the grid goes haywire. Appropriately, this where you will find Wall Street. There are a lot of other interesting districts in that area as well, like The Meat Packing District, home of the puzzling High-Line Rail Road as well as trendy art studios and night life.
East of Central Park, there is column of blocks, running north & south, that are half-sized. Those blocks are the location of the world’s most famous buildings: The Empire State Building, The Chrysler Building, Rockefeller Center, Tiffany’s and the Waldorf Astoria, just to name a few. Those roads running north & south through that area are the equally famous 5th Avenue, Madison Avenue, Park Avenue, and Lexington Avenue.
So you see, if you were to visit Manhattan by only studying the map, and visiting places where the grid was broken, you would see the most famous parts of the city, just like everyone else. But you would have discovered them, and you would have done so with an understanding of context and direction. Your heightened sense of place will heighten your experience.
In Roman mythology a Genius Loci was the protective spirit of a place. In contemporary usage, Genius Loci usually refers to a location's distinctive atmosphere, or a "spirit of place", rather than necessarily a guardian spirit.
Topophilia
Topophilia is literally love of place and is used to describe a strong sense of place or identity. Topophilia can be defined widely so as to include all emotional connections between physical environment and human beings.
A Place Blog
To me, traveling to a place is about understanding what that place means and how it works... about understanding what it means to be there. I'm very fascinated by the connections between physical environment and human beings.
Sometimes I will write directly about this connection, and, the rest of the time, the "Genius Loci" will be affecting me whether I realize it or not. I plan on using this blog as a place to write whatever is on my mind really, but my goal is to at least consider how my sense of place is both developing and being developed by what I am thinking.
Oddly enough, the creation of this blog is not so much about where I am but where I am not. I am not with you, my friends and loved ones, which, at the end of the day, is my favorite place to be.