Yesterday, Meredith had a bad day and came home crying saying that she was depressed. She even missed her soccer game because of it. The problem was that I couldn't pinpoint the source of her emotions. It's not as simple as asking her what is wrong, because often she can't find a way to express her emotions and asking her sometimes just makes her that more upset. Usually she will show that there is a problem by crying, refusing to do anything I ask her to do, getting upset with any little inquiry or suggestion I make trying to help her, and being very over reactive to any minor stress. In these situations, the only thing that I have learned to do is to give her lots of space, remove any stresses, and provide opportunities to refuel her right brain like drawing, watching TV, listening to music, or playing with her dolls.
Meredith said that she just doesn't get the concepts and can't process what her teaching is saying. She has always struggled with these concepts in math. She says that all she hears is "Blah, blah, blah." Not in a disrespectful way at all--just that she literally can't process what she is hearing; it doesn't mean anything to her.Over the last few months, I have learned a really good way to judge how Meredith is feeling or what problem she is experiencing by asking one simple question: "What's Merebith doing?" Meredith told me that during math class last week, Merebith was in a coma being kept alive by a machine. And because Merebith is Meredith's "Control Center," (according to Meredith) no learning was happening...the factory was closed essentially. That gave me a pretty good idea about how math was going for her lately and what her emotional state was. Merebith always displays an exaggerated version of how Meredith is feeling--she's like a cartoon character in that way. This exaggeration is really helpful because it leaves me little doubt as to what Meredith is feeling!
At least I know that Meredith understands irony...

Reading your stories reminds me so much of how such metaphorical thinking really is an adaptation for those who think visually. It reminds me of how I dealt with working memory tasks and verbal type issues early in life. I had a "memory scroll" where I'd "write" things I needed to remember/learn, and refer to it when I needed to pull up the information. I became a great speller, because I stored pictures of the words that I could just pull up at will. Meredith's descriptions of filing cabinets reminds me of how I dealt with learning multiple languages at once. People used to ask me, "How do you separate them from one another? Don't you get confused?" I'd say no. The reason? They each had their own filing cabinets. :)
ReplyDeleteHi Lynne,
ReplyDeleteI'm so excited to read about how you adapted as a visual thinker--especially since your adaptations are so similar to my daughter. I just don't read very much out there describing this (do you?) and I'm glad we can put this information out there together.
Two questions for you:
1) You said you stored pictures of the words that you could pull up when you needed to know how to spell them. Did you have a picture that went with the word, or did you store just the word itself?
2) Wondering if you might clear up a little confusion I have. On the one hand, visual thinking is so fast and natural for visual thinkers, it is not necessarily hard to store and retrieve information in mental files, correct?
On the other hand, I see Meredith having only a limited amount of energy to recall information from her files. If I ask her too many questions which require her to go into her files, she says her head feels like it is going to explode.
In your experience or in your opinion, do you think that Meredith gets worn out just by the act of finding the information, or do you think it is more that she gets tired translating her mental, visual information into words to communicate with me? I think I'm starting to understand that really, it is the translating back and forth between pictures and words and words to pictures that is exhausting.
I would love your opinions on this.