home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.angst
- Path: sparky!uunet!blaze.cs.jhu.edu!biffvm!callahan
- From: callahan@biffvm.cs.jhu.edu (Paul Callahan)
- Subject: Lost Mental Facilities of Childhood
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.054857.4341@blaze.cs.jhu.edu>
- Sender: news@blaze.cs.jhu.edu (Usenet news system)
- Organization: Johns Hopkins Computer Science Department, Baltimore, MD
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 05:48:57 GMT
- Lines: 78
-
- I looked into alt.angst today, and instead of finding angst by any conceivable
- definition, all I found was some drivel related to FurryMUCK. I wanted to
- flame but I see it's a monster thread posted to many groups. What's the use?
- Flaming will just make things worse. Instead of flaming, I will try to start a
- thread about an odd thing that has begun to bother me recently. It is so
- weird, and so personal that it might not start much of a thread at all.
-
- It recently hit me that I no longer possess a mental facility I had up to age 12
- (at least) and lost somewhere along the lines. It was definitely gone by age
- 16. I am now 27 (for anyone who hasn't read my other postings), and until this
- point, I have not thought about it much. It was not very useful, but it
- entertained me throughout my introverted childhood, and I wonder why and when I
- lost it and whether it can be made to return. I started to muse about it as I
- was reading a book called _Nobody Nowhere_, which is the autobiography of an
- autistic woman named Donna Williams. She describes certain ways she would block
- out the world as child, and entertain herself by seeing spots and patterns in
- her head. This tendency was related to her autism, but parts of it struck a
- chord with me.
-
- As a child I took it for granted that I could, almost at will, close my eyes
- while lying down in a certain way, and see "landscapes" moving under me, as if I
- were floating. I could control the movement, and actually feel as if I were
- going up or down or sideways. I put "landscapes" in quotes, because that's not
- a complete description; there were two types I can remember. One appeared to
- be actual land: barren, rocky, desert land with mountains and valleys and
- cliffs. I recall being able to descend into valleys. The other was not land
- at all, or anything much like the real world. The best description I can give
- is a set of empty rooms covered entirely in intricate abstract patterns,
- reminiscent of oriental rugs. In both cases, the "landscapes" would change
- in a manner related to the way I felt I was moving. I don't suggest that
- there were detailed images in my brain. I suppose it was more like a waking
- dream state in which I thought I was seeing specific things, but if I had
- attempted to discern details, I would have found chaos (like written words in a
- dream, which rarely say the same thing upon rereading).
-
- There are other things I did in childhood (no, *not* LSD, as some of you may be
- thinking) which are more easily explained. For example, I noticed how I could
- see spots by applying pressure to my eyes (ultimately forming sort of a bright
- yellow donut shape). Donna Williams also alludes to doing this, interestingly
- enough, but it seems to me I knew other children who knew about this, and I'm
- pretty sure it's not what I'm trying to describe here.
-
- One of the things that intrigues me the most, and that the careful reader will
- have noticed, is that this ability of mine disappeared with the onset of
- puberty. Is this a coincidence, or a hormonal thing? Or was it just that as
- I came out of childhood, I was less inclined to indulge in such seemingly
- pointless amusements. I really don't know. It seems to me that I stopped
- doing it for a while, then tried it and couldn't quite get it to work, and
- finally put it out of my mind entirely.
-
- After reading _Nobody Nowhere_ I decided to put some time into rediscovering
- this ability, but to little avail. For one thing, it seems to me that the
- way I would lie down was somehow important (or I thought so as a child), and
- I've forgotten exactly what it was. In an attempt to regain this mental state,
- I recently spent some time with my eyes closed, trying to block out thoughts and
- see whatever images would appear. When I managed to stay this way long enough
- (which was not common) I would eventually see a rapid chain of random mental
- images, mostly abstract and asymmetrical. I still couldn't recapture the
- feeling of control and movement that I remembered from childhood. A couple of
- times I thought I had it for an instant, but as I child I used to be able to
- enter the state easily, and stay that way for extended periods of time.
-
- There might be a trick to it. It's possible that I started out with the
- spots due to pressure on the eyes and then went into a mental state in which I
- interpreted them in a special way. However, as an adult, I'm less inclined to
- subject my eyes to this sort of abuse, so I'm not planning to try such an
- approach.
-
- The only reason it really bothers me is that at one point in my life I knew with
- full confidence that I could do this, yet now it seems so remote and bizarre
- that I'm inclined to discount it entirely. Is there anyone else out there who
- played similar solitary mental games as a child and cannot recapture the same
- feeling in adulthood?
- --
- "I would rather be torn to pieces by the poison-clawed cat, than to suffer one
- instant of acceptance by the resident intellectuals of rec.arts.books."
- [slightly modified; attribution left as an exercise to the reader]
- -- Paul Callahan, callahan@biffvm.cs.jhu.edu --
-