I
remember sitting in the station wagon in the garage returning home from somewhere.
I was in middle school, and my high school sister’s Algebra book was in my lap,
open. She was in the front seat. I was reading it.
“What
are you doing?” she asked.
“What
is this?” I asked, “Is this math?”
“Yeah,”
Jami replied, “in high school it gets harder. You start using letters in with
the numbers.”
She
didn’t say it like it was scary or anything. She was nonchalant,
matter-of-fact. I walked into the house in a daze. What was it about letters
that I didn’t know? Why was this being hidden from me?
I
remember this as the first time I grappled with an idea. There was a physical
feeling in my head as I stretched and strained my brain to try and find the
meaning of this cryptic message – “You start using letters in with the numbers.”
I heard
a blind man on the radio describe the feeling of being lost, alone in a hotel
room. He described “groping” the walls try to understand and conceptualize the
layout of the room. Though I’m not blind, I related to that in the way that I
felt as I wrestled with big ideas. I
groped and fondled and grasped but lacked the ability to conceptualize the
entire picture.
I’ve
always loved this feeling. I read books and authors about subjects I have no expertise
in; I ponder philosophical mysteries I haven’t done the coursework for. Not
because I can understand the answer but for the lovely feeling in my head that
comes from knowing that there’s something too big for me to grasp.
I think
that what I’m fascinated by is the feeling of possibility when I ponder a topic
I can’t grasp. When I read Brian Greene’s The
Elegant Universe about the nature of string theory, I walked away with a
flawed and rudimentary idea of string theory. I couldn’t teach a class in it. I
don’t understand the equations involved. Yet I find myself searching for that
feeling all the time. I want to hear and read people who know more about a
topic than I’d ever considered. It proves to me how much is out there, how
little I know. It also reinforces to me the vastness of the human capacity to
understand.
I have
a former player and student who went on to Lindenwood University on a bowling
scholarship. When Brad was a junior in high school, I pulled him aside for “the
talk”. If he was interested in going to college to play soccer, I needed to
know where he wanted to go so I could start the recruiting process. That’s when
he broke the news that he wasn’t going to play soccer. He wanted to focus on bowling.
From there on out, I quizzed him every day about bowling. Why is it scored so
weird? Why are there so many different balls? I learned about oil patterns and
lane strategies.
I got
the same feeling in my brain listening to Brad conduct a master class on
bowling that I got from reading about string theory.
I am thoroughly enjoying your blogs. Please keep on blogging. Also - this has been my biggest problem in choosing a degree, and perhaps one of the main reasons as to why I have not gone back yet. I am intrigued by so many different areas that I cannot choose to study just one. If I could, I would get a degree in everything. From math to communications and everything in between. I've considered teaching elementary so I get a little bit of everything. I hope to one day discover a passion that surpasses the rest, until then I shall remain in the Property Management world.
ReplyDeleteI'll keep writing, don't worry. Meanwhile, check this out.
Deletehttp://xkcd.com/863/
Haha! Yep, that about sums it up!
ReplyDelete