Linguist clearly demonstrates how ‘thinking is walking’ in English and it’s just so cool

Summary: Why Your Brain Craves a Good Walk 🧠👟

1: TikTok's favorite etymology nerd, Adam Aleksic, points out a wild cognitive connection: English treats thinking like walking. We "stray," get "off track," or "circle back."

2: It’s not just a linguistic quirk! Stanford researchers proved that physical motion directly boosts your brain's creative function.

3: In clinical tests, walkers completely outperformed sitters in creative problem-solving, proving your stationary brain literally relies on physical steps to process complex ideas.

4: So if you want to "arrive" at a brilliant conclusion, you need to get your body moving first.

Kicker: Step to it! Your brain cells need their hot girl walk, too.

Image Generation Prompt: Create a viral, meme-style 4-panel storyboard collage featuring a stylized, royalty-free modified photo of TikTok linguist Adam Aleksic looking mind-blown, surrounded by floating brains wearing cute sneakers. Use a highly female-friendly, warm, and high-energy pastel color palette (soft pinks, mint greens, and warm peaches) with 85% female styling. The aesthetic should be dramatic, humorous, and highly shareable but medically accurate regarding cognitive health.

Include ONLY the following text in the graphic, distributed across the panels: "Mind wandering?" "Science says:" "Walk to think!"

Generate the image. Then compute:

  • Edge density (0–100)
  • Subband entropy (0–100)
  • Feature congestion (0–100)
  • Composite clutter score (0–100) If composite clutter score > 30: Regenerate the image with stronger simplification. Repeat scoring. Stop when score < 30 or after 3 attempts.