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Ever notice how some of your best ideas come when you’re nowhere near your desk? Last week, I was stuck on a particularly complex article about workplace burnout. I’d interviewed three different researchers, had pages of notes, but couldn’t figure out how to tie everything together. So I did what I always do when my brain feels stuck: I went for a walk.
Twenty minutes in, with no podcasts or music, just me and the rhythm of my footsteps, the entire structure clicked into place. It’s happened enough times now that I’ve stopped calling these walks “breaks” and started calling them what they really are: thinking sessions.
If you’re someone who gets your best ideas in the shower, during your commute, or on a run, you’re not alone. There’s actually fascinating science behind why our brains work differently when we’re moving through space. After interviewing dozens of people about their thinking habits and diving into the research, I’ve noticed that people who do their best thinking while driving or walking tend to share certain cognitive traits that reveal something deeper about how their minds process information.
1) They naturally engage in diffuse thinking
When you’re driving a familiar route or walking a path you know well, your brain shifts into what neuroscientists call “diffuse mode.” Unlike focused mode, where you’re actively concentrating on a specific task, diffuse thinking lets your mind wander and make unexpected connections.
I started running a few years ago, not because I particularly loved it, but because I noticed my brain worked differently when my body was moving and screens weren’t involved. During these runs, solutions to problems I wasn’t even actively thinking about would suddenly appear.
People who gravitate toward movement-based thinking naturally tap into this mode. Their brains seem wired to take advantage of these moments when conscious effort relaxes and unconscious processing takes over. They’re not forcing connections; they’re creating the conditions for connections to emerge.
2) They process information through spatial navigation
There’s something about moving through physical space that helps certain minds organize abstract ideas. When you’re walking or driving, your brain is constantly updating your position, scanning for obstacles, and planning your route. This spatial processing seems to spill over into how you handle complex thoughts.
One startup founder I interviewed told me she drives the same loop around her neighborhood whenever she needs to work through a strategic decision. “It’s like the forward motion helps push my thoughts forward too,” she explained. The physical journey becomes a metaphor for the mental journey.
These spatial thinkers often describe their ideas as having “locations” in their mind. They’ll say things like “I need to go back to that thought” or “Let me walk you through my reasoning.” Their cognitive maps aren’t just conceptual; they’re almost physical.
3) They need rhythm and repetition to unlock creativity
Walking and driving both involve repetitive, rhythmic movements. Your footsteps create a beat. The hum of the engine provides a constant backdrop. This rhythm seems to free up mental resources that would otherwise be tied up in maintaining focus.
Research shows that repetitive physical activity can induce a mild meditative state. Your prefrontal cortex, the brain’s CEO, relaxes its grip, allowing other regions to communicate more freely. This is why shower thoughts are a thing, and why some people swear by their morning commute for problem-solving.
I’ve noticed this in my own work. My mid-afternoon walk, which I generously call “creative thinking time” but is honestly sometimes just procrastination, has become essential to my writing process. The steady pace of walking creates a kind of mental metronome that helps ideas flow more naturally.
4) They’re comfortable with unstructured thinking time
In our hyper-connected world, being alone with your thoughts has become almost radical. But people who think best while moving actively seek out these pockets of unstructured mental time. They resist the urge to fill every moment with podcasts, audiobooks, or phone calls.
This comfort with mental silence reveals something important: these thinkers trust their brains to work things out without constant input. They understand that boredom isn’t empty; it’s fertile ground for creativity.
When I take my thinking walks, I deliberately leave my phone on silent and avoid any external stimulation. At first, this felt uncomfortable, almost wasteful. Now I recognize these moments as some of my most productive, even though they might look like doing nothing to an outside observer.
5) They use movement to regulate cognitive load
Have you ever paced while on a difficult phone call? Or walked in circles while trying to memorize something? Movement helps regulate how much mental effort we’re expending. People who think best while moving have an intuitive understanding of this balance.
Driving on a familiar route or walking at a steady pace occupies just enough of your attention to prevent mental overload while leaving plenty of bandwidth for deeper thinking. It’s the cognitive equivalent of fidgeting, giving your brain something to do while it works on harder problems in the background.
6) They have strong mind-body awareness
These movement-thinkers tend to be more attuned to the connection between their physical and mental states. They notice when they’re mentally stuck and know that changing their physical state can shift their cognitive state too.
One middle manager I interviewed keeps a pair of walking shoes under her desk. “When I feel my thoughts going in circles during a meeting, I know it’s time to suggest we take a walking discussion instead,” she told me. This awareness of when movement is needed reveals a sophisticated understanding of their own cognitive patterns.
7) They’re naturally inclined toward bottom-up processing
While some people think best by starting with big concepts and working down to details, movement-thinkers often work the opposite way. The sensory experience of walking or driving grounds them in immediate, concrete reality, from which abstract insights can emerge.
This bottom-up processing style means they build understanding from direct experience rather than theoretical frameworks. The physical journey provides raw material that their minds shape into insights. They’re not thinking about walking; they’re thinking through walking.
Final thoughts
Understanding these cognitive traits isn’t just interesting from a psychological perspective; it’s practical. If you recognize yourself in these patterns, you can stop feeling guilty about taking that walking break or that longer route home. Your brain isn’t procrastinating; it’s processing.
For me, accepting that my best thinking happens away from my desk has transformed how I structure my workday. Those morning runs aren’t stealing time from writing; they’re making the writing possible. The afternoon walks aren’t avoiding work; they’re doing the work, just in a different way.
So next time you get your best idea while driving or solve a problem during a walk, remember: it’s not a coincidence. It’s your brain doing what it does best when you give it the movement it needs to think.
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