Your Hidden Genius- Part 2


Heights Tribune-March 1992
by Bridgette Mongeon © 1992


Right hemisphere and healing
Emotions and expression lie tucked away in the right hemisphere. That is the thread of substance that holds together psychologist books and tapes on healing. It seems to be the home for that inner child who wonders why all pain has been rationalized away by the left hemisphere. Writers and poets often purge themselves on paper. How often do we hear songs on the radio identifying with the pain or emotions of the songwriter? In workshops held on right brain writing or drawing, students often feel a sense of healing just with the acknowledgment that they can do it.

There seems to be a writer and an artist in all of us. An inborn need to express ourselves as well as to be understood. However perhaps when we were young we were told that we were a dreadful speller, or unable to write. Institutions made it a thing you had to do instead of wanting to. Overcome with dread we mentally put down our pencil. The teacher may have also pointed out Johnny was the best artist, unable to keep up or to create in the Johnny style, we just quit trying. And the Johnny’s, often strangled by the responsibility to always create a masterpiece, grew to hate their ability. The left hemisphere likes to keep control and appears to encourage such badgering. It is that horrible little voice one hears when one tries.

In Gabriele Lusser Rico’s Book Writing the Natural Way she teaches a techniques that allows one to tap into the right brain for writing. She states, “Clustering not only frees your expressive power but also helps you discover what you have to say, encouraging a flow instead of a mere trickle.” In clustering a person finds a nucleus word that they would like to write about. This nucleus word is centered on a blank page and circled.

One simply Iets go and writes the connections that come, jotting each down quickly in its own circle radiating outward from the center in any direction they want to go. At first you may bicker with your left-brain, as it doesn’t not want to do the meaningless tasks but sustain. If you temporarily out of ideas, doodle until something else comes. Amazingly there will come a point when you have a sense of what you want to write about. Referring back to the clustering the writing seems to write itself.

In the well-known book of Betty Edwards, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, Ms. Edwards discuss the symbols that we have developed through out our lives. The symbols for the facial features, in drawing a portrait, have become our left-brains way of drawing, stored from our childhood. Miss Edwards teaches students not to name the parts of the face as you draw but only draw the shapes as they related to each other. Never naming nose, eyes, etc. for this allows your left brain to insert its symbols. For an idea of how well one can draw and feel the shift, she suggests drawing a picture upside down. The left brain considers this a tedious task and will let go, allowing the right brain to take over. Your space on the drawing pad should be made in proportion to the photo. Start drawing utilizing shadows and shapes comparing one to the other, never naming body parts. The left-brain is bored and will sometimes fight tremendously to stop. Don’t turn the picture or photo right side up until you are complete. The results are often astounding.

Comments are heard by many students about the benefits of working in a workshop as compared to utilizing the books. Perhaps it is the lack of discipline by the participant or maybe more so the person’s inability to turn of the cries from the loud, dominant left hemisphere. People often need to hear a real voice telling them they can do it, and showing them the places that the left hemisphere creeps in.

It is said that people only utilize 4% of their potential. Creativity is a key that unlocks the door to the storehouse of the greatest of our potential. What masterpieces and discoveries, what healing and nurturing can take place with our understanding and encouragement of right brain and creativity? For both the child and the adults the gift of creativity is for everyone and as marvelous as the person who holds the key.

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Your Hidden Genius- Part 1

Heights Tribune-February 1992
by Bridgette Mongeon © 1992

Why is creativity so important in our lives? It is easy to see the role creativity plays in art, music, theater, poetry, and writing. However scientists also depend on it to enlighten them to new discoveries and mathematicians rely on creativity to assist them in problem solving. Even though our bosses appreciate our knowledge of the tools and process of our job, it is our creativity and insight that most employers relish.

Often when one first hears about creativity and the right brain, it sounds as if it is some spurt of mystical revelation or sci-fi movie plot. Scientific documentation about the functions of the two hemispheres of the brain go back as far as l836. The breakthrough in the understanding of the two hemispheres came in the 60’s. In the famous split brain operations the neural connections between the two hemispheres were severed in hopes of controlling epileptic seizures. The process was successful and enabled physicians to scientifically test the thinking abilities of each hemisphere separately. They discovered that each half of the brain has its own individual train of conscious thought and its own memories and that the two sides of the brain think in fundamentally different ways.

The examination of the unique characteristics of the hemispheres and their functions enable us to understand more clearly how to open ourselves up to the creative potential within us.

The left hemisphere is our more dominant side. In most people the Ieft hemisphere controls speech. It also analyzes, counts, marks time, plans step by step procedures, and makes rational statements based on logic. The right hemisphere dreams, understand metaphors, and imagines. It can also image things you know to be real (the layout of your kitchen). It sees how things exist and how the parts go together to make a whole. The right hemisphere can create a new combination of ideas.

Creativity in Education
Utilizing these different modes of thinking is imperative, not only to adults, but with children also. As one Iearns to manipulate the Ieft brain into allowing the right brain to handle more tasks, creativity comes. The more the road is traveled the easier it is to find. It is unfortunate that for the most part our educational system is based on the left hemisphere, with our teaching styles relying so heavily on the linguistics, tests, scores, rules, and multiple choice. We end up with children who are forced to not think, but are instead pressured to comply and perform. Einstein wrote “lt is nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not yet entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry; for this delicate little plant, aside from stimulation, stands mainly in need off freedom; without this it goes to wreck and ruin without fail. It is a very grave mistake to think that the enjoyment of seeing and searching can be promoted by means of coercion and a sense of duty.”

Many children who require to learn in a different mode are often labeled learning disabled, hyperactive or worse. These children unable to conform, to the known educational process, are frequently tucked away in categories instead of discovering their individual learning styles.

Throughout history those noted as creative adults were difficult students, and found school boring. Einstein teacher stated, “He was a lazy dog and will never amount to anything! “Woody Allen viewed school as a waste of time, skipping for the movie house. Woodrow Wilson did not read until he was 11, Einstein was 8. Sculptor Auguste Rodin was described as the worst pupil in school. Freidrich Nietzche’s parents through him to be retarded. Teachers criticized Marcel Proust for writing disorganized compositions and Amy Lowell the poet was an atrocious speller. Photographer Ansel Adams in his autobiography, spoke of his conflict with institutional education in San Francisco just after the turn o f the century “… I was simply a matter of memorizing names, nothing about the process of memorizing or any reason to memorize. Education without either meaning or excitement is impossible. “

It is important to know that all children are gifted. Some children and adults may be born with talent but talent can be learned. There are many people who have an enormous amount of talent but lack the passion and excitement that the creative process offers.

Go to Hidden Genius: Part two