Post by Pincho Paxton on Feb 13, 2024 12:26:31 GMT
Link...
Early drawing and building skills linked to enhanced education and behavior in children
Pincho says...
I was born a genius, and became an artist, and then a scientist, but I didn't have fine motor skills, I had predictive motor skills, and a good memory. There's a difference!
I'll give you some examples...
1/ When I was 5 years old at a party I was holding a glass of orange juice, and I got excited and threw my arm into the air holding the orange juice. The orange flew out of the beaker, and into the air towards a girl in a posh party dress. Then my mind slowed everything down, and the room was like something from The Matrix with bullet time. I reached over with the beaker, and caught all of the orange juice back into the beaker again, and none landed on the girl.
2/ As a child I wanted to be a good artist around 4 years old. I drew a horse, tore up the paper, and started again about 30 times over. My mom got a doctor who said that I was a perfectionist. But the point is that my motor skills to draw the horse were letting me down at that age.
3/ Later in life I was in the bath, and saw smoke coming under the door. My bedroom was on fire, my dad told me to put the fire out, because the smoke was too much for him to do it himself(he had bad lungs). I got water from my bath in a bowl, and again the room turned into slow motion like bullet time. I threw the water in the air and watched it separate into 3 parts. Each part landed on the main flames in the room like a triangle. The fire was out in one go which looked impossible.
4/ I've beat the Professional English Pool Team at pool. I seven balled the captain, who two week later was in the World Final in Las Vegas.
So what I am saying here is that fine motor skills can be tuned in for emergencies that may not be apparent for art skills. Genius can be hidden in the data. Plus that these are probably predictive skills, fine motor skills that predict where things will end up.
Pincho Paxton
Early drawing and building skills linked to enhanced education and behavior in children
Pincho says...
I was born a genius, and became an artist, and then a scientist, but I didn't have fine motor skills, I had predictive motor skills, and a good memory. There's a difference!
I'll give you some examples...
1/ When I was 5 years old at a party I was holding a glass of orange juice, and I got excited and threw my arm into the air holding the orange juice. The orange flew out of the beaker, and into the air towards a girl in a posh party dress. Then my mind slowed everything down, and the room was like something from The Matrix with bullet time. I reached over with the beaker, and caught all of the orange juice back into the beaker again, and none landed on the girl.
2/ As a child I wanted to be a good artist around 4 years old. I drew a horse, tore up the paper, and started again about 30 times over. My mom got a doctor who said that I was a perfectionist. But the point is that my motor skills to draw the horse were letting me down at that age.
3/ Later in life I was in the bath, and saw smoke coming under the door. My bedroom was on fire, my dad told me to put the fire out, because the smoke was too much for him to do it himself(he had bad lungs). I got water from my bath in a bowl, and again the room turned into slow motion like bullet time. I threw the water in the air and watched it separate into 3 parts. Each part landed on the main flames in the room like a triangle. The fire was out in one go which looked impossible.
4/ I've beat the Professional English Pool Team at pool. I seven balled the captain, who two week later was in the World Final in Las Vegas.
So what I am saying here is that fine motor skills can be tuned in for emergencies that may not be apparent for art skills. Genius can be hidden in the data. Plus that these are probably predictive skills, fine motor skills that predict where things will end up.
Pincho Paxton