on geography
B. will be driving off soon to a several-day workshop in a town a couple hours drive from here, which is considerably outside our regular traveling orbit. (I've been to the area a few times.) As I am geographically enabled, while she is not, I wrote out detailed step-by-step driving directions to the specific locales to which she's traveling.
Looking over and marking up these directions, she asked me, "Do you memorize directions to where you're going?"
I said: "No. I keep a little map in my head and I navigate off of that. Directions of the kind I gave you I don't find very helpful. If someone gives them to me, I look them up on a map and memorize the map. But I know that a lot of people prefer written directions, so I'm happy to provide those if that's what they want."
And that's what it means to be a spatially-oriented person.
Looking over and marking up these directions, she asked me, "Do you memorize directions to where you're going?"
I said: "No. I keep a little map in my head and I navigate off of that. Directions of the kind I gave you I don't find very helpful. If someone gives them to me, I look them up on a map and memorize the map. But I know that a lot of people prefer written directions, so I'm happy to provide those if that's what they want."
And that's what it means to be a spatially-oriented person.
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I usually look up the map on google before I leave but don't bother to print or transfer it to a phone unless it is very complicated.
If I have been to a place once, I can usually return.
I was surprised recently at how dependent people are on Google on their phones. The cab company had to have the street address of the hospital. That surprised me because major landmarks like a 20 story hospital should be just somewhere that you know without an address.
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Fwiw, I'm not the best at navigation either.
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