Sunday, February 28, 2016

A500.2.3.RB_SiegmundWayne

Tell Your Story

          Since I was about seven years old, I began becoming more aware of my surroundings, and my place among them. I would look at things and try to determine what it meant to me, and who I was in relationship to it. I recall drawing conclusions from making associations with numbers, colors, music, and the arts. I remember seeing the number seven in the window of a local pharmacy and thinking what a special age I was at to have it posted in a window. Although it was an advertisement for Seagram's Seven, the association meant something. In time, the number seven would become a very spiritual number for me. My favorite color growing up was cobalt blue. It was a very specific shade of blue. Even the name told me it was my favorite color. Classical music struck a cord in me, letting me know of just another association. I wasn't, however, at the time able to clearly identify what the actual association was, but I was able to simply identify with it. Debussy, Rachmaninoff, Bach, Mozart; it didn't matter, I loved them all. Drawing was a way for me to find solitude and focus on something, namely light, shadow, proportion, and perspective. It was a challenge to draw something and see it come out just the way I intended it to.
          The next period of in my life is the period of becoming who and what I wanted to be. I had developed along the way, a sense of self. I could even say that with all the new stimuli at that age, my self awareness was somewhat distracting and even annoying. I was always hearing myself think; always conscious of my own thoughts. Although I had been in gymnastics since I was seven, it wasn't until I was about 10 that I knew I wanted to compete as a gymnast. There was a poise, that classical music, and that cobalt blue that I wanted to perform in the gym. The idea of becoming an American gymnast was motivating. The concept I held about it was exciting. I couldn't wait to become it. Over the next four years, friends and family shared a sense of awe with me about being a gymnast and performing the skills that they do. In time, other's expectations for me proved to be too much. It was also during this time that I learned how lying to my mother almost earned me a trip to a psychologist. At that age, it was just too scary to ever lie again. So, I learned the value of honesty; that I'd rather pay the consequence of a truth than of a lie. When my parents separated, and the new gymnastics season started, I no longer had a ride to the gym. Thinking that this minor setback was temporary, I signed up for Karate. After developing my discipline and martial arts skills over the next two and a half years, a good friend, and fellow gymnast invited me to join him at at his gym, taking the train three times a week. Once again, I was doing what I loved.
          As I entered this next phase in life, I realized I had developed some very high standards for myself. Between my gymnastics training and drafting shop in high school, I came to know a standard of excellence that I expected of myself. I strived for excellence in everything I did. In doing so, I separated myself from my brothers and peers at school. I was now different, and not one to be associated with. It simply was not cool to have high standards as a teenager then. These standards included terms like precise, strong, flexible, clean, refined, driven, focused, neat, and devoted. These standards would follow me for the rest of my life in everything I did. In adulthood, I learned to persevere, and understand attention to detail. After retiring from gymnastics, I found these standards came to be necessary in the Navy. It was also around this time that I identified the fact I was subconsciously remembering behavioral patterns of people I spent a considerable amount of time with. I also realized that I was using this information to calculate the use of words, behavior and other decisions that proved beneficial in part to myself. It helped me understand them on a deeper level in a relatively short period of time. Since I began this course, its clear that I have been doing quite a bit of critical thinking all my life. It appears to be something I have control over, and can use to benefit myself, or even others. I am now learning how to focus on deepening and broadening my ability to think critically, an enjoying it.

No comments:

Post a Comment