As I'm cleaning up my apartment and listening to Radio
Lab. The episode is all about Numbers. There is a
fantastic opening segment about how infants view
numbers completely different from us. How they see the
distance between the numbers 1 and 2 as far greater
than the distance between 9 and 10. Because they see
don't view things as single integers, adding an object
to another object doubles the amount you have (1 + 1 =
2) but adding an object to a group of objects doesn't
double a group (9 + 1 = 10). It goes on to say through
reward and prompting they eventually forget that notion
of math and start to see thing the way adults do. By
integers (one is one one is one is one, you can add one
to anything its still only increasing by one each
time).
The second segment is about a strange russian
mathematician. Interesting, but not as good s the
first.
The third segment though. Seemed to hit home. Made me
think a little and relate to my own life (thats what
great about Radio Lab, the stories always relate or
make you think). It all about this guy who became pen
pals with his old high school math teacher. The write
math problems back and forth to each other and try to
confound each other. For years. When his teacher's son
dies abruptly he doesn't know how to respond, so he
doesn't. But the teacher goes on for years sending more
math problems, even when the narrator starts a family
and can't keep up with replying. A year or two later
the narrator's brother dies. And he gets a letter with
condolences about his loss from the teacher.
The narrator mentions how bad he feels, about how hard
it was to just say "I'm sorry I never talked to you
about your son and your loss." But how the teacher's
letter hit him, and made him reach this Bifurcation.
Its a math term that states "when a forces upon a
system gets too large there can be a moment when the
dynamics of that system change abruptly and
qualitatively." (direct quote from the show) He
eventually goes to the teacher's house and they talk
about it, and their relationship changes at that point.
It more deep.
Anyways, bifurcation. I think this kind of relates to
how I forgive people. If I think of friendships and
family that have gone burning down in flames (really
only a few of them) and about how I deal with that
destruction of a friendship. I usually just cut off
contact, stop talking to them whatever. But to forgive
whatever destroyed that friendship takes so little.
Usually that non-contact goes on for a long while, but
it takes the littlest of effort to change it.
I think of Rollin. We were college friends, eventually
roommates after college. We lived together for a year
or so (two years maybe). That was all ending with his
getting married. That's exciting enough, but the last
couple months of us living together were also stressful
because his sister basically moved onto our living room
couch. She also worked a night job and was around all
day. Our apartment was a quaint (nice way of saying
small) two bedroom. A third person on our couch, not
paying rent, was infuriating. Anyways, this was
stressful on our friendship, but not crushing. Rollin
wasn't really dealing with the situation despite my
prompting to kick her out. This is all from my
perspective, I have no real clue what was going on in
Rollin's end.
Anyways, the last month or so of living was
particularly silent between us. I had assumed, being
that I was his roommate and all, and that we had been
friends for years, that I would be invited to the
wedding. But a month had passed since I literally
watched them send out wedding invitations. And I never
got one, and was never told I wasn't going to the
wedding. This was my good friend, my current roommate,
and I wasn't invited. And no excuse was given. It
wasn't even spoken. It was like this unspoken argument
between us (granted this was from my perspective). He
moves out, gets married, and that's that.
We didn't speak for years (three). And then right
before I moved to Cleveland Rollin called me up. He had
heard I was moving and wanted to see me before I me
before I moved. That was it. We hadn't talked in years.
And despite how things had ended, here it was coming up
again. He wanted to hang out before I moved. That was
all I needed to forget I was upset about not being
invited to his wedding. That whole issue, gone. And
really has never been brought up. It doesn't need to
be. He came down and hung out all weekend. It was a
great weekend, like old times. We've talked a bunch
since then, I saw him a few weekends ago in Buffalo (he
lives in Canada now).
Bifurcation. A splitting. A fork. I suppose being a guy
it is easy to forgive a friend. Slight bit of pressure,
and blam, the normal order is changed and split. Maybe
its over complicating it. But that what I thought of
after hearing it.
You can find that show here.
Radio Lab : Numbers