In the woods, when Simon went back, he had a seizure and hallucinates about jack and his followers. He said they were chanting, and they had a pig on a stick.
To the center of whatever "woods" the bear happens to be in. Running any further, the bear will be running "out" of the woods, more than he is running into it
Halfway. Beyond that, the bear is running out of the woods.
In theory you would only be able to walk 2 miles into the woods. It is some what like a "cup half empty of half full" situation. If you walk 3 miles in you are essentially 3 miles from the side you entered on but 1 mile from the other side therefore only 1 mile into the woods. 2 miles in would put you directly in the center.
Actually you could walk a bit farther to reach the center by starting at a corner. If the woods is square, you could then walk 1/2 the square root of 32 (42 + 42) or approximately 2.8 miles. If the woods is a parallelogram, the distance could be greater. In any case, as infered in the first answer above, once you reach the center you are no longer walking into the woods, you are walking out of it.
Fraggle rock
It's The Fred Penner Show!
The original production of Into the Woods won three 1987 Tony Awards.
Best Original Score; Stephen Sondheim
Best Book of a Musical; James Lapine
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical; Joanna Gleason
In addition, the 2002 revival of Into the Woods won two Tony Awards.
Best Revival of a Musical
Best Lighting Design; Brian MacDevitt
This dream suggests uncertainty about the future. The woods is an in-between place, such as the boundary between childhood and adult life, or perhaps between school and career. The closed down factory symbolizes the dreamer's fear that there will be no prosperity in the future.