Thursday, July 10, 2014

Maps




I'm consulting the map before I set out for my walk.  Yesterday I mapped out the structure of my dance Neighborhood Stories.  I'm thinking about all the people throughout history who have been map makers.  The explorers who drew amps of unchartered land.  The astronomers who mapped the skies.  The scientists who map the body and brain.  But maps aren't static.  If one part of the brain is damaged, another part can be developed to take over the function ordinarily associated with the damaged area. Or brain signals can get scrambled and there is malfunction like synesthesia.  Remarkably at our first Friday night dinner one of the residents had two guests at dinner who both had synesthesia.  The woman of the couple, who were married to each other, had all 5 senses involved, which is rare.  I couldn't imagine how she could cope without sensory overload.  You could be seeing and tasting at the same time, or hearing and kinesthetically feeling, smelling and seeing colors.  She told me they diagnosed her as a child when she came to school one day and asked if the teacher could hear the song that the grass was singing.  Whatever multiple combinations occur, she's always being bombarded with sensory information.  Must be like a constant drug hallucination.

Are we intrinsically driven to map out things to give order to our lives and the universe we live in?  If we didn't map, would we perceive life as chaos?  Humans are not comfortable with chaos, though chaos exists throughout, not only our planet but also in the universe.

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