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Yesterday I walked to the Harvard Exit to see The Artist. When I first thought of walking, I was thinking I'd go by way of the University District. I wasn't sure what would be the best way to go up the hill, so I checked Google Maps. To my surprise, Google suggested that I walk down Westlake instead and cut over at South Lake Union. This route had never even occurred to me, but it did indeed look shorter on the map.
So I walked down to the Center for Wooden Boats in South Lake Union. I hadn't really understood the route up the hill that Google Maps had shown, so I looked it up again on my phone. It sent me up through the cancer care campus and then onto a road I'm not sure I've ever been on before. Well, I call it road, but it's really more of an overpass that goes over the freeway. It's called Lakeview, and that's because it throws you way up in the air where you get an outstanding view of Lake Union. Unfortunately it also triggered my fear of heights, and I started feeling strong pangs of vertigo. But by golly it got me where I needed to go. After a stiff climb up Belmont, there was the theater.
So that was a voyage of discovery, even if it made me a little weak in the knees. I kept thinking, "Please, giant earthquake, don't hit now!"
So I walked down to the Center for Wooden Boats in South Lake Union. I hadn't really understood the route up the hill that Google Maps had shown, so I looked it up again on my phone. It sent me up through the cancer care campus and then onto a road I'm not sure I've ever been on before. Well, I call it road, but it's really more of an overpass that goes over the freeway. It's called Lakeview, and that's because it throws you way up in the air where you get an outstanding view of Lake Union. Unfortunately it also triggered my fear of heights, and I started feeling strong pangs of vertigo. But by golly it got me where I needed to go. After a stiff climb up Belmont, there was the theater.
So that was a voyage of discovery, even if it made me a little weak in the knees. I kept thinking, "Please, giant earthquake, don't hit now!"