The $p$ orbitals, for example, have a nodal plane where the nucleus is, which means the electron density is zero there. An orbital doesn't represent a path the electrons take when moving. An orbital is a region of probability. To make things clear and definite, when we draw an orbital we only draw the region where 95% (for example) of the probability lies. The fact that the $p$ orbitals have a nodal plane simply means that the probability of finding an electron on that plane vanishes. A [positivist](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positivism) would thus consider an electron's trajectory around a nucleus nonsensical, since by the uncertainty principle, we can never measure it. The use of orbitals is for visualizing electron density - where _can_ the electron be, most of the time? It's a very useful way of interpreting phenomena such as chemical reactivity (think of SN<sub>2</sub>) or stability (think of benzene's $p$ orbitals).