Home Reflections The Geometry of Waiting

The Geometry of Waiting

There is a peculiar rhythm to the city that most of us choose to ignore. We move through intersections like water through a sieve, rarely pausing to consider the lines we trace against the concrete. In the seventeenth century, philosophers often spoke of the ‘great machine’ of the world, a clockwork universe where every gear and lever had its assigned place. We have traded those wooden gears for asphalt and traffic signals, yet the impulse remains the same: we are all looking for a moment of stillness within the chaos. It is a strange, quiet ambition, to stand at the edge of a busy thoroughfare and wait for the world to align itself just so. We assume that movement is the only way to make progress, but there is a profound, almost sacred intelligence in the act of standing still while everything else rushes past. If we stopped long enough to watch the patterns, would we see the city as a cage, or as a dance? And what happens to the space left behind when the crowd finally clears?

Keep Clear by Keeny Newton

Keeny Newton has captured this exact tension in the image titled Keep Clear. It is a reminder that even in the busiest of places, there is a hidden order waiting to be noticed. Does this view change how you see the streets you walk every day?