Geographics
People's relationship to their environment — who moves like they belong, and who doesn't.
Geographics is about how people interact with the terrain they're in. Locals move with familiarity and purpose; outsiders move differently — hesitating, checking signage, taking unusual routes. The contrast is often visible.
Key ideas include anchor points (places a person is comfortable and returns to), habitual areas (zones people frequent), and natural lines of drift (the paths people instinctively take through a space).
A geographic anomaly is someone whose relationship to the space doesn't match the baseline — loitering where people normally pass through, or moving with familiarity somewhere they shouldn't know.
Key indicators
- How people relate to and move through their environment
- Anchor points, habitual areas, and natural lines of drift
- Belonging vs. not-belonging is often visible in movement
The cohort turns these concepts into a trained skill — drills, a community, and coaching.
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