Today's quote is from Persi Diaconis relating his transition from a magician to a mathematician. He recalls, "I thought I could do anything...So I bought William Feller's Introduction To Probability Theory and Its Applications and I thought I would just read this book. And I couldn't read it. I didn't know calculus, or at least not enough."
Persi Diaconis |
Today is my sister's birthday. Marilyn is my only sister and although she looks younger than I, she is seven years my senior. In fact, for much of my preadolescent years, she raised me. I believe her structured guidance was due to my mother's needed attention to my younger brothers. I was a challenging child. I had three noticeable characteristics. I was defiant. I was stubborn. I was argumentative. These notable traits did not go unnoticed by my teenaged sister and many times we butted heads.
I have written previously about the sibling bond and my sister did instruct and direct me to paths that I still travel on to this day. She taught me how to twist to Chubby Checker and she spent an entire afternoon with me detailing the intricacies of riffle shuffling. Most importantly, the summer before my ninth grade year, she pulled me aside, and we had a long talk about what to expect in high school. I have forgotten many of the details of that conversation but one bit of advise has impacted me to this day. She suggested that I get involved in school. She felt that although academics were important, being involved in school activities outside of the classroom would energize me, create an enjoyable experience, and build healthy relationships. I think that her suggestion planted the seed that later grew into my desire to be a teacher. As I reflect on our conversation, it was a touching moment between a twenty-something woman and a teenage boy. I think she was aware that I was a socially awkward introvert that needed a gentle push or more appropriately, to be placed in her hands and riffle shuffled, not seven times, just once.