A prompt for a walking script that directs the walker on how to move through a site.
Write a walk that invites the walker to depart from the norms of how one moves through the site where they are walking.
Navigational norms might be thought of in terms of routes or paths: trails, sidewalks, keep-off signs. The routes might be manmade or morethanmanmade, but either way, these routes possess consensus and suggestion, and the question of authority and order are never far behind. If I arrive at a stairwell, for example, I understand that I am supposed to walk down the steps and not slide down the railings. If I come to a garden, I understand I am supposed to walk on the path and not through the beds.
Behavioral norms might be the manner in which I move through a site. If I am on a busy street, I understand that I should move at the speed of the crowd, rather than glacially or at a sprint. Even without a crowd, I am unlikely to walk in a curlicue pattern down a sidewalk rather than simply progress forward in a line. If I come to a parking lot, I understand that I have arrived there in order to make my way toward the door to the store, and not to take a nice circular walk around the lot for my exercise. I am usually not walking backwards or with my arms on my head, or with my eyes closed being guided by someone else. And so on.
Be conscious of the ways this might create a vulnerability for the walker, make them stand out as abnormal. Be conscious of the ways that the walker might appear to be a threat, simply for violating consensus. Maybe writing a walk for a group — all pressing play simultaneously and engaging in this off-label behaviour together—could create safety in numbers. Or maybe that would turn their walk into a performance. Perhaps this prompt is for scoring a performance that needs no rehearsal, only the coordination of audio, which would mean that the walker is not, finally, the receiver of the walk, but that the witnesses to the walker (who might be accidental, who might have been invited) would be the walk’s audience.