When whoever wrote the inscription on the Temple of Apollo in Delphi reminds you to “Know thyself,” they probably weren’t thinking of Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences. But one facet of self-knowledge is indeed an understanding of how your particular network of axon and dendrite connections work. When you notice what comes easily to you and what is challenging, you have the possibility of following the one in your life-choices and forgiving yourself for the other. We all seem to be gifted one for free— without effort, find ourselves singing notes in our mind or crafting words or imagining shapes or colors or noticing patterns and such. That’s important information.
As is the flip side. When we wonder why this person can so easily perform a musical passage that trips us up or notice the social undertones in a gathering that completely eluded us or speaks with an eloquence beyond our reach, the idea that we are all a unique blend of intelligences is useful. And yet more important, the understanding that we don’t have to be —indeed, cannot be—equally smart in them all.
From my childhood until yesterday, I’ve been terrible at the kind of follow-the-given-direction thinking that had my friends putting together model airplanes, my biology lab partner finishing way ahead of me, my friend taking apart a car engine with the ease I felt in playing Bach. Yet as a young adult I realized that I could keep working on Bach and hire a plumber or a mechanic to deal with the things that I could not. I did feel some slight shame as a man who was never handy, but hey, let’s hear you solo on some blues!
Having made it almost 75 years without having done more than change the oil or a tire (I can do both!), it has worked out okay. But the advent of the computer and the new way of getting through the maze of voice mail and codes and Youtube instructional videos has forced me to try to up the game in my non-preferred intelligences. And when it succeeds, there indeed is some satisfaction in knowing that I’m not as stupid as I’ve thought I was.
For example, in the last two days, I finally figured out how to unsubscribe for thebestpdf service that I kept seeing on (and paying for on) my Visa bill. I finally figured out how to pay UPS bills online and find the shipping info on the invoice. I restored a mysteriously disappeared Britbox on the TV. And most remarkable of all, I solved the problem of being out of my Now’s the Time CD’s that accompany my book by remembering that I had an external disk drive and could upload the one remaining double CD that a friend in Bangkok had leant to me and upload the songs to the computer, to be converted into a shareable and sellable item. Go, Doug!
All of this drives me mad, but yes, it feels good to finally sit down, be patient, feel some confidence in my overall intelligence and discover that (sometimes) I can do it! Turns out you can teach an old Doug new tricks.
But please don’t ask me to fix your car or plumbing.