Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Leap-Frog Thinking

It’s funny how the mind works. I’m more than a little curious about where thoughts and memories come from. I have a progressive kind of thought “leap-frog” thing that at times can be quite fun, but is usually a bit annoying. Here’s how it works.

It begins with me reading or hearing something that starts my mind wondering about some odd detail from whatever it is that I’ve just read or heard. Next, the natural progression of my wonderings causes something different, but closely connected to the original thing I was first wondering about, to come to mind and I’ll start thinking about that. I’ll stay focused on whatever this happens to be until my mind takes its next “leap-frog” thing.

So goes the mental processing of a self-diagnosed, borderline ADD person. I’m forever finding myself staring thoughtfully at whatever person happens to be speaking with my mind having moved progressively through dozens of different topics. Top that off with the fact that I’m usually more that a little confused about how I started thinking about whatever it is that I am now think of, and you have an extremely perplexing quandary.

I recently had one of these “leap-frog” episodes in church. It went something like this:

The pastor was preaching, and I was listening. I don’t know if he said “peppermints,” or if something he happened to mention caused me to think of peppermints. Whatever the reason, I found myself thinking of peppermints. Peppermints caused me to think of a time I had my class use paper plates to make peppermints to decorate for a holiday program. Then I remembered a boy who wanted to make Mentos instead of the red and white kind, because in his words, “I like Mentos better than the other kind.” I started wondering which kind I like better. That made me think of how when I was a volunteer at Memorial City Hospital in Houston and I would always get two packages of Mentos in the cafeteria and eat them the whole time I was at the hospital. Thinking about being a hospital volunteer caused me to remember Doug Persons, possibly my first best friend in Houston. Then I thought about the time Doug Persons and I made copies of our faces on the hospital’s copier.

I was engrossed in my twisted web of thought when something yanked me back to reality. I somehow managed to backtrack through my mind’s bizarre train of thought and find the logical progression that had brought me to my current wonderings.

Like I said, it’s funny how the mind works…at least mine.

7 comments:

Real Live Preacher said...

Yeah, that pretty much sounds like you. I remember this......uh.... strawberries would be nice right about now.

Anonymous said...

I do this too...So it must run in the family! I sometimes sit in my office when one of my employees come in and closely look at them as they speak. But after they are done, I have absolutely no clue what they told me. Then I try to cover it up saying--ok, that was not clear. Explain it to me again.... It seems to work often enough!

Love you-Janan

Anonymous said...

Thats funny. Sounds like some of our discussions while we were studyng, praying and reading greek during chapel in seminary.

You the Man.

Tracy W.

The Teller said...

Are you kidding me? We've actually made that into a game we call the "ADD Game".

First person throws out a phrase:
I like catfish.

Next person must carry it forward.
Catfish? I have 2 cats, they're both orange.

Either back to #1 or onto the 3rd person:
I wonder what Adam named first the color orange or the fruit orange.

Continuing:
Fruit? You should have seen the fruit at the bank today. He was wearing suspenders...at the bank.

Kids love this game (once they get the idea) and its great on long roadtrips after you've exhausted "I spy" and "license plate bingo". But for best results, introduce to adult friends after the 2nd beer.

Hugh said...

I like the sound of that game!

Hmmm...? There has got to be a way I productivly can use a game like that in my classroom.

I'll have to think about that...thanks for the idea!

Anonymous said...

I ran on to your blog....I am also a man that teaches third grade. Are you also the only man in your building? I sure am.

Max

Anonymous said...

Hugh,
I also have fond memories of our days volunteering at Memorial City Hospital, but I don't recall making copies of our faces. Hope all is well with you. We just moved from Hawaii to northern Virginia.

Take care,
Doug Persons