Recently, however, we've noticed that Meredith seems to be having a much easier time in math. When asking Meredith about this, she said that she finally figured a way to get her number characters out of the way so that they don't distract her anymore. Before she goes into math class, Merebith and Dogot line up all the numbers on one of those "hold-a-ring walking ropes" used in preschools and walk the numbers into a closet, where they remain until class is over! Apparently the numbers are pretty gullible and easy to manipulate. When math class is over, all the numbers pile out of the closet and usually most of them are gasping for fresh air since one of the numbers has a little problem with gas...
Stories from a girl who thinks in pictures and {mostly} loves her synesthesia
Showing posts with label Dogot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dogot. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Getting Your Numbers Out of the Way for Math Class
Labels:
Dogot,
math,
Merebith,
Meredith,
OLP,
ordinal-linguistic personification,
Synesthesia,
synesthetes
Friday, February 22, 2013
Use the "Kariokie-Dokie" to Remember Song Lyrics
I've written before about how Meredith loves music and has an uncanny memory for song lyrics. Today, Meredith explained that she is able to do this because she designed a system in her mind to help her remember the lyrics. All she has to do is head on over to the "Kariokie-Dokie!"
The Kariokie-Dokie is a karaoke place where Merebith loves to go sing. The Kariokie-Dokie is a bit like a theatre with a big screen and seating. Songs play on the screen with the lyrics, just like you see at any typical karaoke bar. The background visuals on the screen are the synesthetic colors and patterns that Meredith sees when she hears that particular song.
Merebith and her friends love to have karaoke competitions. Merebith has won three karaoke trophies already! Of course, Dogot always loses competitions because he sings in his robot-like voice. The security ants like to participate as well.
Meredith and I always talk about the irony that she can remember all the lyrics to songs even when words are not her friend in other settings. Now, however, it makes sense because when she is singing, she is accessing a dynamic, mental visual system to "see" the words. And the fact that after a period of time she no longer needs to refer to the karaoke screen is testament that processing information (even words) through a visual thinking circuit is what ultimately solidifies information into knowledge and long-term memory for her and other highly visual thinkers
Labels:
ants,
circuit,
Dogot,
Kariokie-Dokie,
knowledge,
lyrics,
memory,
Merebith,
Meredith,
music,
Synesthesia,
visual learner,
visual thinking
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Numbers as People
I recently wrote a post about Math as Characters. As a follow-up, I wanted to post a picture that Meredith drew me a few months ago...I just found it. It shows her numbers zero through nine as she thinks of them, including their color. Perceiving numbers, days or the week, or other sequential items as people is called Ordinal-Linguistic Personification, or OLP. It is a subtype of synesthesia.
I will try to describe her numbers' personalities the best I can here. She could probably write pages about each number since they have many independent stories. For one example, once they had a cooking competition among themselves that lasted for a few weeks. They divided up into groups and they each had one type of food to work with. Merebith and Dogot were the judges...
Perceiving numbers, days or the week, or other sequential items as people is called Ordinal-Linguistic Personification, or OLP. It is a subtype of synesthesia.
1 - God Boy Since he is "number one" or "numero uno" as they say, he is pretty full of himself. He has a halo and wings.
2 - Confused Girl She is confused because she is made up of both curves and straight lines. She's kind of dumb.
3 - Partyboy Boy Since he's made of curves, he's really fun and hyper.
4 - Normal Girl She is holding a snail that is branded with the number four. All of her snails are branded with the number four because they are like her "herd." She's pretty average because she is made of straight lines.
5 - Cool Boy He's cool because he has a "cool" curve.
6 - Lonely Girl She is lonely without her number 1 because she likes to be with other people and her favorite number is 16. She is in a wheelchair because she is clumsy without her partner (number 1).
7 - Innocent Boy You can tell he is innocent from his little propeller hat and ice cream cone.
8 - Twin Boys They are named twin boys because they are conjoined twins. The smaller brother sits on top of the bigger brother. Their symbol is Gemini.
9 - Alien Girl Alien Girl is a tom-boy. She is always CRAZY!!!* She annoys everybody.
0 - Fun Boy He is hyper and likes being happy.
*Meredith wrote that as you can tell by the use of color!
Monday, November 5, 2012
Math in Characters
I finally got around to reading Born on a Blue Day by Daniel Tammet. Daniel is a well-known autistic savant and synesthete--a savant unique in his abilities to describe to others how he thinks. In his book, he describes how numbers have always been a very important part of his life. He explains that he experiences each number as having shape, color, emotion, and personality. He also explained that he found algebra difficult because for him, letters do not elicit the synesthetic response as numbers. Because I know Meredith's numbers are characters (see this post), I asked her if they caused her any difficulty with math problems. She told me, chuckling, that when doing subtraction one of the numbers is "taken away" to "juvie" (i.e., juvenile jail).
I know that algebra tends to be difficult for visual thinkers and asked her what happens when letters are introduced to math problems. She said that her letters are characters, too. The letter a, for instance, is a girl (in the shape of "A") wearing a fancy A-line dress. The letter x is a criminal.
She said that actually, Merebith is doing diagnostics on an algebra equation at the moment. She is trying to figure out how Meredith solved a really long algebra equation when she had trouble solving a very short one. Chuckling again, Meredith said that Merebith and Dogot are playing good cop, bad cop with the numbers in the equation. She said it's like an old black and white detective movie where the police question the suspects: "Where were you at 12:00 yesterday..."
Merebith is shining a bright light on the suspects. They first questioned number two, who is actually a cloud. But because he could only sputter out thunder and lightening trying to answer their questions, they let him go. Dogot is wearing the police hat he took out from his extensive hat collection and is using this really funny, deep robot talk, trying hard to act like a bad cop.
So I suppose it is safe to say that because Meredith's numbers are characters and each equation has a storyline factors into why Meredith often finds learning math frustrating, despite her teacher's response that she has a lot of potential in math. I imagine that Meredith is trying to reconcile how math is "supposed to work" with how Merebith diagnoses how math works.
Labels:
algebra,
Born on a Blue Day,
Daniel Tammet,
Dogot,
letters,
math,
Merebith,
numbers,
savant,
Synesthesia
Monday, June 18, 2012
Swimming in Your Thoughts
Meredith just started swimming with a new swim team. She has always loved swimming, but it really has to be the right environment. For instance, the last team we joined practiced in an enormous indoor swim complex that was exceptionally loud and chaotic, which meant the coaches also yelled a lot. Not good. Then Meredith swam with a summer league where she enjoyed practice at the outdoor pool, but detested the meets which were loud, long, chaotic, unbearably hot...you get the picture.
So, she is so enjoying her new arrangement. There are maybe 10 kids at the most at her practices, swim meets are optional, it is at an outdoor, heated pool, and the coach is a very sweet mannered young woman. I'm shocked that she is actually wanting to practice three times per week because she complained so much in the past about going. Obviously the difference is the sensory environment. The...sensory...environment. Nine times out of ten the sensory environment is what stresses Meredith.
And that brings me to the point of swimming as an attractive sport for people like Meredith--highly visual thinkers who have weaker auditory systems (i.e., Mavericks). Swimming quiets down all the noise so the auditory system isn't working in overdrive. It eliminates visual distractions so the visual system isn't engaged in it's perpetual scanning mode. The elimination of the auditory and visual distractions allows you to enter that state-of-mind where you can freely wander through your thoughts (without being accussed of daydreaming). The physical aspect probably helps in engaging the right brain as well. You don't usually get too cold or too hot. Really, it is quite ideal for this breed.
So, as always is the case, Merebith is following along with Meredith and has also started back with swimming, but she has her own Olympic sized pool. Guess who her coach is? Michael Phelps! Apparently he struts into practice wearing all eight of his gold medals around his neck. Merebith loves swimming.
Dogot, meanwhile, has his own smaller pool filled with oil. His favorite thing to do is to lie on his back and spit mouthfuls of the oil up into the air. Can't you just picture it? Of course when he gets out, he is covered in oil. No problem! He just rolls over to this huge blow-dryer looking machine and when he turns it on, it blows all the oil right off. How convenient!
Labels:
auditory,
distractions,
Dogot,
environment,
loud,
massage,
Maverick,
Merebith,
Michael Phelps,
oil,
pool,
sensory,
swimming
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Can You Turn Your Brain Off?
I wish I had the ability to "turn off" my brain like my daughter. Here is the story on how I discovered how she turns her brain off.
Of course I then had to ask her if Merebith went to sleep when she turned her mind off. Meredith said that actually, Merebith is given a tranquilizer to make her faint. For Dogot, she presses his reset button because he'll be out of it for awhile. I asked Meredith who was the one to give Merebith the tranquilizer shot. She she that it was one of the "hands" with the Mickey Mouse gloves on it. Meredith explained that basically she controls these mechanical hands when she needs to do something to Merebith or Dogot. Ah, now I remember. She talked about a hand coming out to tickle Merebith to give her the feeling of guilt. This is one of the many mechanical hands that she uses in her mind.
Back to tranquilizing Merebith... Meredith said that she laughs at Merebith when she is sleeping after being shot with the tranquilizer because she mumbles things like, "Dogot...Dogot, don't touch...the computer," and "What...should..I wear?"
Dogot, on the other hand, mumbles other words while he is sleeping: "Bark...bark...bark." I don't mean bark like "ruff, ruff," I mean he actually says the word, "bark," because as you know, he is a robot after all.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
What Do People in Your Life Taste Like?
It all started when we were running late for school this morning. Meredith didn't have time to have breakfast at home, so we were going to get her breakfast at a local coffee shop near her school. We were near a McDonalds and I asked her whether she would rather have that instead. Meredith told me she hates McDonalds because she is learning in science class about all the chemicals McDonalds puts in it's food. Then she said, "Mom, I've memorized all the tastes, and McDonalds hamburgers taste a lot different than TerraBurger hamburgers." (TerraBurger is a local "fast-food" alternative that serves organic food.) "Let me taste it...first the McDonalds hamburger...[she tastes it]...then the TerraBurger hamburger...[she tastes it]," she went on. "Wow, they taste so different!"

I've heard that some synesthetes get specific tastes in their mouths when they hear a particular name or word. So, I asked Meredith if she tastes anything with certain words. She told me that she can think of anything and get the taste in her mouth--getting the pleasure of the taste without actually eating. But I asked her again about whether specific names gives her specific tastes without her trying. Then she went on to tell me the tastes that she has for some specific people. We started with one person who she didn't get along with when they first met. "First, she tasted like a sour green apple. But now she is a brownie," Meredith explained.
Hearing this, I'm a little confused, because it doesn't sound like a synesthetic experience, because those don't generally change over time (that I'm aware of). And I was hearing Meredith really describing associations, which makes sense with a lot of other things she has told me. For example, she has a (mental) file on important people in her life and in the file, she sees words that describe that person, in a font that she associates with that person.
I asked Meredith what her taste for me was, and she didn't answer right away. Then she told me that Dogot had messed up the computer because sometimes the magnet inside him does that if he is too close to the computer. Because Dogot was no longer able to type in the name of the person she was thinking of to get the taste, she had to go to the backup paper files. She looked in the files for about a minute, and finally found the file and told me that I was a 20-layer, double fudge chocolate cake. Phew! I thought I might taste like dirt or something!!! Meredith's Dad and brother also taste like a 20-layer cake, which is nice to hear. What this told me, however, is that her "tastes" for people are not synesthetic; they are associations that she is making.
Associations. Making associations is the absolute strength of a visual thinker. Dr. Cheri Florance calls the engine of the visual thinking pathway the "Associator," as compared to the engine of the verbal thinking pathway, which is the "Sequencer." Visual thinkers make associations, connecting information to something they already know. My husband has explained to me that if he or Meredith don't have any context, there is nowhere to put new information. That is why it is important to provide context up front to a visual thinker. Provide the big picture so they know where to make the connections.
Hearing this, I'm a little confused, because it doesn't sound like a synesthetic experience, because those don't generally change over time (that I'm aware of). And I was hearing Meredith really describing associations, which makes sense with a lot of other things she has told me. For example, she has a (mental) file on important people in her life and in the file, she sees words that describe that person, in a font that she associates with that person.
I asked Meredith what her taste for me was, and she didn't answer right away. Then she told me that Dogot had messed up the computer because sometimes the magnet inside him does that if he is too close to the computer. Because Dogot was no longer able to type in the name of the person she was thinking of to get the taste, she had to go to the backup paper files. She looked in the files for about a minute, and finally found the file and told me that I was a 20-layer, double fudge chocolate cake. Phew! I thought I might taste like dirt or something!!! Meredith's Dad and brother also taste like a 20-layer cake, which is nice to hear. What this told me, however, is that her "tastes" for people are not synesthetic; they are associations that she is making.
Associations. Making associations is the absolute strength of a visual thinker. Dr. Cheri Florance calls the engine of the visual thinking pathway the "Associator," as compared to the engine of the verbal thinking pathway, which is the "Sequencer." Visual thinkers make associations, connecting information to something they already know. My husband has explained to me that if he or Meredith don't have any context, there is nowhere to put new information. That is why it is important to provide context up front to a visual thinker. Provide the big picture so they know where to make the connections.
Labels:
association,
brownie,
Dogot,
green apple,
hamburgers,
McDonalds,
memorized,
picture,
school,
Synesthesia,
taste,
tastes
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Thoughts on the Big Screen
Meredith drew me this picture to illustrate what it is like for her when she goes to sleep. It shows Merebith and Dogot sitting in the theater seats watching Meredith's thoughts scroll across the big screen. Dogot's seat (second from the left) just has the armrests because obviously he can't sit down. "He backs in to sit down," Meredith tells me. Merebith (far left) wears 3D glasses and has a lasso to catch the thought going across the movie screen that Meredith wants to think about. You'll see that the thoughts going across the screen in this picture include from left to right: Meredith's heartbeat, her friend Naoreen, lunch, tests, candy, our dog Zelda, and a pedicure with Naoreen.
Labels:
Dogot,
Merebith,
scary images,
screen movie,
sleep,
thought,
tv movies
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Brilliant Make-Believers
A recent commenter shared this story about purposefully creating a mental computer and backup filing system. Unfortunately, the commenter experienced failures with these efforts--the computer blue-screened during an exam and the little guy running the computer tripped on the cord and broke his leg during another exam, rendering him unable to access the back-up files.
I must admit that the cynical side of me thought that maybe this was a spoof of my blog (however, now I do believe the commenter is sincere). Both my husband and I had that initial cynical reaction because hearing things like this sounds totally made up. I see the same reaction on the faces of my friends when I tell them Meredith's stories. There's kind of a "Oh...Hmmm..." followed by an awkward silence. It just occurred to me, being slightly defensive thinking about those reactions, is that, News Flash--it IS made up! These mental scenes are the works of people with a gifted ability to think visually. People with amazing imaginations.
When I shared this commenter's story with my daughter, Meredith, she didn't skip a beat in responding. (She obviously hasn't had enough experience to build that cynical side!) She thought it was funny, but said that has happened to her as well. Apparently, Dogot frequently trips over computer cords. And like the commenter's little guy, Dogot once tripped and broke his wheel. Fortunately, when Dogot's parts arrive as he grows bigger, they come with spares so Merebith was able to repair his wheel.
The news to me of all of this was that Meredith even had computer files--I thought they were all paper files. She said that she got them in 2008. I wonder if that is when she first started using the computer...? And again like the commenter, she still keeps paper files for backup. Except, she said, that sometimes Dogot uses the papers to do his business. "Dogot has a business?" I asked with great curiosity. "No, not that kind of business. You know...his business...he is a dog, remember?" "Oh," I finally said. "Except that his 'business' is oil instead of pee and...you know," she said. "When that happens, the information on the page is all blacked out and you can't see anything. Good thing is, though, Merebith has a machine called a "detector" and it can detect the words through the oil and then make, like, five new copies of the paper."
I have a feeling that this blog will continue as long as I have the energy to record her stories or at least for the next few years before the teenager in her tells me to bug off, because there seems to be no end to her imagination and the scenes, machines, and characters that occupy her mind. For now, I'll just enjoy the brilliance of it all.
I must admit that the cynical side of me thought that maybe this was a spoof of my blog (however, now I do believe the commenter is sincere). Both my husband and I had that initial cynical reaction because hearing things like this sounds totally made up. I see the same reaction on the faces of my friends when I tell them Meredith's stories. There's kind of a "Oh...Hmmm..." followed by an awkward silence. It just occurred to me, being slightly defensive thinking about those reactions, is that, News Flash--it IS made up! These mental scenes are the works of people with a gifted ability to think visually. People with amazing imaginations.
When I shared this commenter's story with my daughter, Meredith, she didn't skip a beat in responding. (She obviously hasn't had enough experience to build that cynical side!) She thought it was funny, but said that has happened to her as well. Apparently, Dogot frequently trips over computer cords. And like the commenter's little guy, Dogot once tripped and broke his wheel. Fortunately, when Dogot's parts arrive as he grows bigger, they come with spares so Merebith was able to repair his wheel.
The news to me of all of this was that Meredith even had computer files--I thought they were all paper files. She said that she got them in 2008. I wonder if that is when she first started using the computer...? And again like the commenter, she still keeps paper files for backup. Except, she said, that sometimes Dogot uses the papers to do his business. "Dogot has a business?" I asked with great curiosity. "No, not that kind of business. You know...his business...he is a dog, remember?" "Oh," I finally said. "Except that his 'business' is oil instead of pee and...you know," she said. "When that happens, the information on the page is all blacked out and you can't see anything. Good thing is, though, Merebith has a machine called a "detector" and it can detect the words through the oil and then make, like, five new copies of the paper."
I have a feeling that this blog will continue as long as I have the energy to record her stories or at least for the next few years before the teenager in her tells me to bug off, because there seems to be no end to her imagination and the scenes, machines, and characters that occupy her mind. For now, I'll just enjoy the brilliance of it all.
Labels:
business,
computer,
Dogot,
filing system,
gifted,
imagination,
make-believe,
Merebith
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