‘Froggy’ Windows, Hearts and The Way He Looks at Things….

fog

Yesterday while standing in front of the door waiting for DC’s transportation to come, I decided to draw a few hearts on the fogged up window. DC loves to draw on windows when they are all ‘froggy’ (DC-speak), so I asked him to draw a heart for me. He did, and in true DC fashion he started with a V and continued around in one stroke to make the heart, instead of drawing one side and then the other. I still find it amazing the way he sees something as simple as a heart. It still comes out the same way, but he sees the drawing of it quite differently than I do. It always makes me wish for that 5 minutes in his head to see, through his eyes the way he sees the rest of the world around him.

The heart reminded me of an earlier post about this very subject (and ummmmm…. full disclosure – the hula hoop is collecting dust in the same spot I left it back then).

Perception, Hula Hoops and a little bit of Firefly…. 

 

fire

Last week I was talking to my friend Geri at work and somehow we got on the subject of hula hoops. I proceeded to tell her that I was quite the expert hula hoop-er when I was a kid. I could hula hoop 4 at a time, I could do all of the tricks. I could start at my wrist and hula hoop to my neck, waist, hips to my knees and all the way back up again. I could walk down the street while hula hooping. I was pretty good, if I do say so myself.

Later, back at my desk, Dud Gramley rang my extension to tell me that he had been in Target that past weekend and he noticed that they had a few Firefly characters on the shelf, “You know, that guy that you like with the Hawaiian shirt”.

“That would be Wash”

“Why is he holding a dinosaur?”

“[sigh….] ‘We will rule over all this land, and we will call it…This Land’ “ – He did not get it. I e-mailed him a clip, he would not watch it.

After only watching for 20 minutes a year ago (he insists it was more), Dud has determined that he HATES Firefly. With every ridiculous reason he gives me, it becomes only another reason for me to make it my mission to get him to watch it.

I told him I had planned to stop at Target on my way home anyway so I would check it out.

I stopped at Target as planned and looked in the toy department for the Firefly figures. They were sold out. – What does this tell you, Dud? I would not have stopped in the toy department if it were not for the figures but while there I happened to notice hula hoops. On a whim, I bought two, one for me and one for DC.

I brought them home and DC was not impressed at all. I tried mine out and much like anything that is different to him – as my first pair of glasses that he insisted that I “Take off glasses, NO!” or anytime I happen to put my hair up “Mom! Hair! No!” – he did not like it at all. He kept grabbing it to make me stop. I finally got him to stop grabbing it and hula hooped for about 15 minutes. It was exhausting, because, you now – I’m old, but it was also kind of fun. It was so exhausting that I wondered if this could actually be a workout – I googled it and yes, there are quite a few hula-hoop workout videos on you-tube. So I’ve found my new workout routine. We’ll see how long this lasts.

This story (I really am going somewhere with all of this) is really about DC’s perception of things, many things. The way he sees things and how difficult it is for him to process what he is seeing at times.  I can never take for granted that what he sees and how he processes what he sees is same way I see it.

His elementary school O.T. pointed this out to me. For example, when DC saw and wrote the letter X, he did not see it as two diagonal lines intersecting

X

– he saw it and wrote it as two V’s (or arrows) connecting.

V

When he first started riding horses he had a very difficult time figuring out how to get on the horse. His inclination was to put the foot closest to the horse in the stirrup which just ended with his foot in the stirrup and the other leg dangling at his side. It took him a long time to understand that he had to put the opposite leg, the one farthest from the horse in the stirrup and swing his other leg over. He got it eventually, but it was not second nature to him, he had to learn it.

For years when he went swimming, he would walk around the pool stroking with his arms. He thought he was swimming because looking at it from outside or above the water, he thought that was exactly what everyone else was doing.

So after I completed my 15 minutes of continuous hula hooping the other day, DC decided to jump on the band wagon. He ran into the living room with his hula hoop and yelled “Hey watch this” and proceeded to spin the hoop. But instead of the hip action it takes to keep the hoop going, he spun himself around. Of course the hoop fell, but this did not stop him, he thinks he is doing it correctly.

“Hey, watch this” again and again.

We are working on this……..

*****
Just for fun……… EVERYBODY SING!

8 thoughts on “‘Froggy’ Windows, Hearts and The Way He Looks at Things….

  1. Wow! The x’s and the hearts really ARE the shapes DC describes. It’s actually quite brilliant and, if I may suggest, the seeds for a mind just perfect for computer programming. Pattern recognition in coding requires the ability to see things that others miss. I found this totally fascinating. Thank you for the illustrations, too. I wonder how much of this happens for other people and we just don’t notice it.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I bet that was funny to watch. Did he exhaust himself too? I actually have a fitness hula hoop, it has a little weight to it. I had no idea there were videos on youtube. I’ll have to check that out. I think its a great warmup exercise for the back. But mine is collecting dust too. I just got bored with it. A video might make it fun. I like DC’s heart drawing method. When you do it our way, it doesn’t necessarily come out even.

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