I was sitting at a table with colleagues at a conference,
when one of them asked me what I was enjoying most about the conference center.
I didn’t even hesitate and answered, “The stairs.” I went on to explain that I loved the large,
beautiful, open staircases at the
conference hotel, which had been built around
1910 and was refurbished in the late 1940's.
I said I loved the way the wide staircases were such an invitation to
use the stairs. We then discussed how
none of us had even really looked for the elevators, since the staircases were
such a prominent architectural feature.
Now, I have nothing against elevators, and since many of my family
members have used wheelchairs, I think they are a necessary part of any public
building that has more than one floor.
However, it is unfortunate that somehow, when elevators were added,
stairs were hidden – no longer the open invitation they had once been.
|
With the invitation these stairs offer, there is no need to look for an elevator. |
There are many invitations in life that we don’t even notice,
but that create daily habits. My colleagues
agreed that they had taken way more flights of stairs than normal, simply
because of the structure of the building.
A week after I returned from the conference, I was in Bozeman on the
MSU campus for a few days. While I was
there, I stopped into
Joel Schumacher’s office.
He is an associate specialist in
Extension Economics. I told him how
much I liked the way that the parking situation on campus invited me to walk
everywhere. Of course, working on campus and dealing with the parking situation daily, he thought I was crazy. Each day
I was on campus I walked from buildings on the south end to buildings on
the north end of campus. It would have
been ridiculous to drive, as it would have taken more time circling to find
a parking space than it would have taken to walk.
I don’t know for sure, but I suspect I could walk most of main street in
Choteau in about the same time and distance as I got across campus, and yet,
parking is easy here, crosswalks are not as well marked as on campus, and there
aren’t bunches of other people walking; and somehow, I just do not make it a
habit to walk to do my errands.
|
The stairs in this hotel are so grand and indeed, this flight takes you a half-level to the grand piano and then onto the main lobby. |
|
4-H BioScience on MSU campus. |
This has been an unusual year, as I’ve been on campus nearly
once a month since last spring. I’ve been paying attention to how the built
environment either invites or discourages us from daily healthy choices. Joel and I were visiting about how the
buildings on campus, built in different eras, reflect not only structural
choices, but health choices. For
instance, when I stay in the Hedges dorms (built in 1965), the elevators and
stairs are in the same general location, but the stairs are in stair
wells. I think there is a reason they
are called wells. They feel cold, dark
and cavernous -- not exactly an invitation.
Joel mentioned that in one of the new buildings on campus (I’ve not been
in yet) there is a prominent, open staircase as part of the design. Maybe we
have remembered something at the turn of this century that we knew a century
ago. I worked in the courthouse in
Sheridan, Wyoming, which was built in 1905. It had a gorgeous oak staircase
that summoned me to use it often during the years I was there.
I invite you to start looking for and taking the
stairs. Start walking to do your
errands -- just seeing you walking may be enough to encourage others. Start
paying attention to your environment and listen to the ways it invites you into
your habits. If you find that the
invitation isn’t in favor of your health, refuse the invitation and create a
new habit. Structure your life, so that
you are invited to make healthy choices.
No comments:
Post a Comment