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by
Barbara Sher
Read between
November 21, 2018 - January 8, 2019
What you’ve assumed is a disability to be overcome by sheer will is actually an exceptional gift. You are the owner of a remarkable, multitalented brain trying to do its work in a world that doesn’t understand who you are and doesn’t know why you behave as you do.
you should stop trying to fit into the accepted norm at once and begin learning about who you really are.
“Oh my God,” I whispered, turning the pages wildly. “They have the History of Western Music! Do they play the music or do they talk about it? How do you teach the history of music?! Do you have to read music to take this? Oh look, Ancient Trade Routes of Central Asia! Look! The Golden Peaches of Samarqand! Where is Samarqand?! I want one of those peaches! Or are they talking about a painting? The Geology of History? The Geology of History?!
understood them. I was sure of it. If I had known how, I would have tried to become a monk so I too could reverently copy manuscripts like they did, almost as a form of prayer.
And I still audit classes in any college I’m near whenever I can. In which subjects? It doesn’t matter, as long as the teacher is good. They’re all interesting.
To what practical use did I put my learning in the years that followed? I did nothing. I just loved learning and wanted to keep on doing it.
it’s not always so practical to be so practical. Now
whenever I pick up a book or watch the Science Channel or try to read a map of Asia for no particular reason—that life is amazing and there is no end to the wonder of it.
I began to notice clients here and there who reminded me of myself as I was that first day in college. They loved too many different things to ever choose one. They never wanted to stop exploring, trying things out, or learning, but they didn’t direct their learning toward any goal.
Aristotle and Goethe, da Vinci and Ben Franklin—people whose interests were also all over the map—to see if I could find a clue to help me. As I looked through the books of their journals and letters, I noticed something odd: None of these people seemed to have the slightest problem about not sticking with one field!
Scanners, because instead of diving down into the depths of an interest, we scanned the horizon for many interests.
Or they had never even tried one because they couldn’t make up their minds in the first place.
to the senior who reads and writes and travels and has a very fine time with her dozens upon dozens of interests. And maybe I did put one thing I learned in college to practical use, after all: I found out what it’s like to want to learn everything and have no one to show me what to do. In this book, I’m using that experience to understand and try to help you.
Every single thing she sees or thinks of sparkles with potential and pulls her attention. She wants to do them all.
She doesn’t blame her friends and family for smiling knowingly whenever she gets enthused about something new—she lets that roll off her back easily—but it bothers her that she almost never gets to see an end product.
So this is the first thing not to totally resonate. I do finish most projects even though I often dont continue doing more of that thing. So I might learn to play Somewhere Over the Rainbow on ukelele but then learn no further uke songs. Or learn cake decorating but only do one cake for a party and then never again.
Scanners love to read and write, to fix and invent things, to design projects and businesses, to cook and sing, and to create the perfect dinner party.
...and knit and craft and do puzzles and design a system and organize things and grow plants and make scrapbook pages and turn trash into treasures and pet kitties and train dogs and photograph high school seniors...
Intense curiosity about numerous unrelated subjects is one of the most basic characteristics of a Scanner. Scanners are endlessly inquisitive. In fact, Scanners often describe themselves as being hopelessly interested in everything
Scanner doesn’t want to specialize in any of the things she loves, because that means giving up all the rest. Some
I call it the SCANNER DAYBOOK. Scanners often avoid getting involved with a new, fascinating subject when it catches their eye. They say things like, “How can I justify wandering off in yet another direction?” But that’s a real shame, because they’re not breaking any laws or hurting anyone by being curious or enthusiastic by some new thought.
Writing in your Scanner Daybook is more important than you may yet realize.
But the very act of considering your explorations worth keeping track of begins to change everything you ever thought about yourself.
because it becomes so clear that planning, designing, and making a record of your ideas in something called a Scanner Daybook isn’t making a promise; it’s the way inventive people enjoy themselves.
Scanners shouldn’t throw ideas out like trash, no matter how many they may have, no matter how “half-baked” the ideas may be. Respect for ideas is the same as respect for the idea maker: you.
Let’s end the notion that ideas have no value unless they turn into a business
Nothing deprecating is allowed. Praise is due,
This is one difference. I dont feel bad about my many interest in my heart. That map brought me great joy. The one thing I agree with is i feel slight shame for other people to see my map and know what it means. And i do often feel bad about my joys not generating a dime of income.
I wish I was like those people who know exactly what they want from the start.”
the ease with which they answer The Big American Question: “What do you do?”
They buy books that tell them how to find their passion, and they go to career testing services to find out what they’re supposed to be doing,
Scanners don’t want fewer interests
They have special abilities in many areas, and they’re built to use them.
they’re divergent thinkers
A bee’s Reward is nectar. Ella’s Reward is learning about subjects that are completely new to her and helping people with her new knowledge. What’s yours? It’s not a question you can answer without thinking about it for a moment, but you do know the answer.
In most cases it is probably this: does it produce something admirable, something I can be proud of? Secondarily, do I feel engaged and alert while I am learning it?
But something did go away. It was the challenge to go from ignorance to competence, that steep climb to master something that demands every bit of focus I have. I love that kind of challenge.
Scanners love learning more than anything else. And learning is what they’re most talented at.