Homework! |
This afternoon I go in to take the fourth Calculus 1 test of the semester. The first three went well. I am bragging, but I do have an A average in the class so far. This one isn't any different, really--but it is. It is kind of like Christmas when I was a kid.
Once upon a time, I lived in a place where colour TV was a big deal; mobil phones, Post-It notes, and velcro hadn't even been invented; computers were just a gleam in Steve Job's eye; I actually used a slide rule for math; Autism, depression, and indecision were were shameful things no one talked about; and AIDS hadn't been discovered yet. I was 11 years old--and didn't even know to wonder what life would be like when I was 55. I hated school. Our family moved, on the average, every two years and so I was always the "new kid." On my first day of class in one school, I sat in the "most popular" girl's chair by mistake. The other kids told me I'd better move or she would beat me up. (I knew she wouldn't--because I moved before she arrived in class and she turned out to be a nice person, though she never knew who I was.) In another school, when it was discovered that I liked a certain boy, he sat behind me and whispered mean things about my clothes and my shoes while the teacher presented the lesson.
Kind of a geometric image. |
Watching myself. |
Essentially, I didn't know what I wanted and so no matter what I received, it could never be right.
The agony of that hazy expectation is much like what I am feeling this morning.
More homework! |
I know that I will make mistakes on the test, but I don't know what they will be. I prepare and practice, but I am not sure what I should spend my last few hours reviewing.
It is an amazing mix of dread, excitement and wonder that I could be learning a way of thinking that lets me measure the area of shapes with curved surfaces and discover how fast an object is falling at any specific point in time. I am not studying "math," but a way of describing the world around me by using symbols and relationships between numbers.
After walking through the Ft Lauderdale Temple, training for Open House tour guide. April 2014 |
It is magic--except it is real.
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