Take yourself, in your mind’s eye, to an empty avenue. It could be a dirt road, a suburban causeway, a city street. Follow your interest and your mood. Let it be a place you’ve been before, though it might not have been empty when you were there. Visualize yourself there in its emptied state. See yourself navigate it. Tune in to your sensory detail: what do you see, hear, smell, taste, touch? What is the weather, the time, the light? What is it emptied of? In what was is it full? Stay with the image in your mind’s eye for about a minute, with eyes closed. Then open your eyes and record something about the experience—a reminder, a keepsake, a note to self, a caution.
Then disappear yourself from the image and allow a new figure from your imagination to enter the scene. Give that figure the thing you recorded, the knowledge or attention. Watch them navigate the place.
Then make a one-page diagram-cartoon of the figure in this place, annotating details about both the environment and the figure’s experience of it. On the reverse side of the page, grow something (a memory, a letter, a voicemail, an inventory, a log) at the intersection of what they notice and what you gave them.