Why this word is great
UITWAAIEN — [Verb] To take a brisk walk in windy weather to clear one's head. From Dutch uit ("out") + waaien ("to blow"), literally 'to out-blow.' Unlike "wandelen" (a general term for walking, lacking the specific connotation of wind or mental refreshment) or "ontspannen" (to relax broadly, without the active, wind-involved aspect), uitwaaien is a deliberate surrender to the elements. It is the sting of salt-laced gusts on a coastal path, the wayward dance of leaves swept into your stride, or the sudden clarity that comes when the wind strips away thought like loose paper from a desk—a reminder that sometimes the mind needs turbulence to find its calm.