How walking the exact same routes every day quietly reshapes how the brain handles uncertainty, novelty, and change.
Bangol Street has been part of my life for as long as I can remember. In my childhood, this place felt larger than life. It wasn’t just a street.It held memories.People came from far areas just to shop here. The crowd was so much that holding your parent’s hand was necessary,otherwise you would get lost. Every shop was busy back then.Every voice loud and every corner alive.
My grandma used to say this was one of the earliest proper markets of the area. Before big plazas and shiny malls were constructed,Bangol Street carried the city’s economy on its narrow road.Interestingly,my life is also somewhat connected to its pathways.
Generations built their livelihoods here.Sons inherited and continued their father’s business,fabric sellers knew families by name and even tea stalls had regular customers who had been coming for decades.
This street didn’t just sell things.It built relationships.
I still remember walking here as a child,eyes wide with wonder.The lights felt magical,the bangles looked like treasure and every shop was important.There was pride in owning a shop on Bangol Street.
But time doesn’t stop for anyone.Everything has changed over the last twenty years.Today,when I walked down the pathway,the street felt quieter.Not empty,but as if tired. Since new markets have risen over time much bigger,cleaner and louder. They compete with Bangol Street by offering comfort and modern shine that is more attractive.Business here is not what it used to be.
Some shops close early now. Some owners sit silently, waiting more than selling. Yet,they show willingness. Because this place isn’t just business.It is their identity.Bangol Street may no longer be the popular market but people still come here. Not just to shop,but to remember.It connects our past and present.I come here often to see a historical place that survived time.
I want to feel something real in a world chasing speed.This street has seen success, struggle and decline.Regardless,even if the sky darkens,Bangol Street still stands.Its cracked road carried footsteps of history,childhood memories,silent sacrifices and human stories.
And maybe that is why the liveliness of this street still matters because it reminds us where we came from.
We like to think we’re spontaneous,that each day is full of possibilities.Yet our feet quietly disagree with us.Day after day,they trace the same invisible line across the city.What almost nobody tells is that these tiny, repeated choices are doing something very specific inside our brain.
Uncertainty doesn’t always mean danger.We should learn to accept the unusual.Something about how to deal with surprises.
And how you cope when life stops following the script.Change is good for us.