As it was the last remaining dice option, it obviously wasn't a surprise but out of all of them, this was probably the one over which I had least control. This journey was to be under the influence of another person - by handing over my will for the day and following a set of text instructions sent by my good friend Chad, I attempted to put myself in the position of ‘going with the flow', allowing whatever would happen to happen. I had no idea what to expect - the only proviso that I had made was that the tasks were not to be illegal or put me in any physical danger.
Following a set of instructions can be viewed as yet another kind of game-play and a further strategy for laying oneself open to chance encounters. Even though, as a participant in this game, I am obliged to lay aside my free will, I still need to find a response which is 'free within the limits set by the rules' (Roger Caillois, Man, Play and Games). This doesn't come easy to me, being the sort of person who doesn't like being told what to do! Although not spontaneous in the true sense of the word, as someone else had already planned the day’s itinerary, it provoked unplanned reactions and serendipitous occurrences. As ever, I had thought that the day's photographs were a motley bunch of unrelated incidents but on returning home and sorting through them, the usual connections and patterns began to assert themselves.
My first instruction - go to island gardens and walk through the thames tunnel.......
My task completed, I texted back for further instructions. I had naturally assumed that as I had come so far and was on the Greenwich side of the river, that I would be sent up the hill to investigate the Meridian and the Observatory and experienced a frisson of disappointment when my next instructions came through. I was briefly tempted to rebel but then decided I must stick to the rules and be obedient for once in my life....