Week 2 Reading - A Revelation
I think the thing that I learned most from the first two chapters of this book was something about myself. This “thing” is something that I’ve had to deal with throughout this course and upon reflection, throughout my entire life. I’m talking about the types of books that speak to me and the type that I really cannot in any way relate to.Unfortunately, this book seems to be of the latter. I would classify it as more of a philosophical get-in-touch-with-your-inner-self type book. After finished up the first couple chapters, I felt a rush of all the books I’d read come back to me – those I enjoyed and those I did not (regardless of the genre or content). As an individual with a severe case of concrete logical-mathematical thinking, I realize that my brain has a particularly hard time processing text that is deeply philosophical, yet reading a physics, chemistry, or calculus text is relatively easy. As is reading any manual on whatever the topic. And I find some of the statements in the book particularly hard for my brain to accept. Take this passage on p.20 for example: “The pie is enormous, and if you take a slice, the pie is whole again.” (Zander, 2000) Now, as we all know, if you subtract a part from the whole, as long as the part is > 0, you no longer have the whole, as is insinuated by the authors.
Poor mathematics aside, the awareness of my own strengths and weaknesses in reading opened my eyes to the difficulties that some student may have in reading such texts as I enjoy, and quite truthfully, this was my greatest take-away from the first couple chapters.
So, that aside, I do see the value of thinking outside the box, as explained in the text. Another part of the text that resonated with me was the part about scarcity thinking. I believe as Americans, we have really fallen into that mind-set and try to accumulate as much as we possibly can, without much regard for those that have little to nothing.
Moving into chapter three was fearful (because it was much longer than the infinitely long previous two chapters combined) but I was pleasantly surprised. I enjoyed the authors take on “giving an A” and thought at length about what kind of effect that would have on a student population I might be working with next year.
Ironically, I didn’t really start to get into the text myself until I watched the TED talk (which I had seen a couple years ago) and remembered how much I enjoyed watching Ben Zander. And at that point, I decided to give the book an A, and have enjoyed it much more ever since.
(image from the cover of The Art of Possibility by Rosamund Stone Zander and Benjamin Zander)
My response:
Brian,
I had the same problem at first too by thinking in logical terms and was stuck on trying to figure out the pie thing. It was the chapter on giving an A that really helped me out. I have actually started using the “A” method at work and it makes everything a little easier. For instance, the other day I was confused by another co-workers idea for something having to do with training so I tossed it aside and didn’t think about it again. After reading the chapter on giving an A, I thought about the idea and for a moment I stepped outside the box. The next day I went back to work and told my co-worker that he was brilliant. I was able to see the idea in a 3rd dimension instead of just the normal 2 dimensions. I was able to see depth. I had given my co-worker an A and we worked together to build upon his idea. By having an open mind I was able to use logic more appropriately and harmoniously.
1 comments:
I understand the difficulty that you had with this reading: mine was insurmountable. When many voices shout similar messages to me, as so many of these types of texts do, they become white noise. I do not believe that you were unable to understand and relate to the message, smart man that you are, but perhaps the brain was responding to redundant overload. I am glad that the TED talk motivated you to read more, and I will follow your example and give it another shot.
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