Friday, September 30, 2022
Ah, I got it. This is what it means to bend down using your legs instead of your back. Despite years of dance training and yoga, I just got it now. I remember experiencing this feeling momentarily over the years, but nothing consistent.
I haven't been feeling well. Besides feeling pressure on the left side of my head, I was irritable. I thought of sinus inflammation, a dental problem, and a brain tumor. I hit on another possibility: an addiction to Hersey's Milk Chocolate with whole almonds. Can one become addicted to almonds? My rate of consumption has increased of late. Things would have to change. I was becoming cranky.
At 11 a.m., I had an appointment with homeschooled second-grade L. I continued working on the Starfall site. She couldn't manipulate the site from her computer; she had to tell me what to do. It served two functions. First, it helped me to be sure she knew what she was doing. Second, she was forced to use words, and not rely on her visual-spatial sense to operate the site.
When reading, She had trouble remembering words she was confident with before. Maddening. L asked me if I had other students who needed help remembering. On, yes. Five of the eight students I am working with have memory problems. A friend working with her grandson told me she sees a similar problem with him.
I spoke to her mother after the session. I asked if she had ever had a neurologist examine her. Her mother told me that she and L's father had problems learning to read. In contrast, L does much better in math. Her mom told me L could memorize song lyrics and retell complicated jokes. Memorizing lyrics to a song suggests she is using the right brain to memorize. I asked if she remembered the words to the joke or the story. Her mom said probably the story. That is episodic memory, primarily a right brain function.
My friend Judy and I speculate on why there is a rash of children with memory problems. Everyone I talk to says, "The Internet and games." Some speculate that the attentional system is compromised by these computer activities. From what L's mom said, it suggests auditory processing had been neglected in favor of the visual processing of concrete images. I have tried to get these kids to use their left hemispheres with limited success. The other thing the computer games do is leave students believing their learning depends on how stimulating the lesson is. They have no responsibility to dial up their ability to attend. Boy, are they in trouble. If they're in trouble, we all are. These kids are our future.
I heard someone interviewed on NPR talk about code-switching. This means we have to change the way we speak with different groups. He said of it as a burden instead of an asset. People who speak multiple languages are proud of their accomplishments and will even brag about them. People who speak a variety of dialects don't feel the same, with the exception of Trevor Noah.
Acquiring new thoughts, languages, and ways of doing things is considered good when it enlarges us and makes us bigger people. It is considered bad when we feel it diminishes us. Minority groups often feel that way because they are told their ingroup code is inferior or bad. Look what we did with the Native American children; we removed them from their homes and beat them when they spoke their native language. People kill others over cultural differences; think of the Uyghurs in China.
My mother felt threatened by any difference between herself and me. She considered me disrespectful if I held a different opinion from hers. It was maddening. I spent my youth fighting for my life. I have no idea how I wound up believing adapting to others could make me bigger. I remember thinking there had to be a way we could work it out, so it was to both our advantage. That's how I lived with Mike. I learned from him and became a bigger person. I saw that as what life with another was about. I didn't feel I would lose myself; no, I would expand, have a more extensive vocabulary, and learn to express myself in other 'languages.' A person's core is indestructible no matter what form it takes. I couldn't lose myself in the process of adapting.
There are circumstances where 'being true to yourself creates extreme discomfort. Some parents banish their children when they don't conform to their expectations or, in some cases, kill them.
I don't know if Mike consciously thought he would learn from me. I suspect not because when I asked him if he thought he was right about everything when we met, he said yes. I told him, "That's crazy." Whatever his conscious understanding was, he did learn from me – or maybe he used me as an excuse to become who he always wanted to be.
How can anyone over twenty-five believe they are always right is beyond me? I picked that age because that's how old I was when the penny dropped. I observed my life and thought, "If I'm right about everything, how come my life isn't perfect?" Good question, huh?
On the other hand, some people make surface adaptations to a self-destructive extent. They ignore the lesson of the dialectic: thesis, antithesis, and synthesis. You have to figure out how you can change in accordance with your core self, not for the purpose of appeasing others. It's the two poles of others and self and finding that balance.