Echoes and words

Stay on Track






It’s a phrase we hear all the time, meaning, don’t deviate from your chosen path – but it is, in fact, nonsense.






The phrase derives directly from navigation, specifically airplane navigation. There one sets a course (the intended direction) but because of winds and weather the way one actually flies is often rather different. This results in one creating one’s ‘track’ – where one has in fact gone while trying to get directly from A to B.






It follows, then, that one can never fail to be ‘on track’ because that’s the route one’s taken. One can be ‘on course’ — if you’re lucky.






The original difference between the words conveys an important life lesson; we may plan a course that is theoretically perfect, but life will always mess with any such plans. That’s when we create our track.

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Published on April 23, 2019 07:38
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