Tuesday, July 26, 2011

They Move in Silence

I was at the forefront of the Baby Boom. American GIs, returning from four years of war, made babies like crazy. I missed Kindergarten due to an affection for cowboy hats. A friend who lived down the street let me wear his cowbot hat just before school started. We shared everything. Secrets, tricycles, a cowboy hat, and a nasty ringworm that had taken up residence inside his hat. There were 70+ kids in the Kindergarten class at St. Charles School in 1952 in Drexel Hill, PA, and the good nuns were NOT about to have a plague of ringworm spread through the hoards of little people in their crowded school. I was sentenced to my home for a year of plucking hairs from the infected site with tweezers under a heat lamp. Since this was before Sesame Street and The Electric Company and Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, I did not breath in my numbers and letters from TV. PBS was not in existence, there were only three channels, and kids' programming consisted of shows like Howdy Doody, Kukla, Fran and Ollie, and Bozo the Clown. I was behind when I entered first grade.

People were flocking to the suburbs from Philadelphia, and primary school age kids were now tumbling out the windows. The good nuns had to do something. We wouldn't fit anymore into a conventional classroom, no matter how hard they squeezed us. Their solution was brilliant. Let's put them in the auditorium. We can put LOTS of desks in there, and we can put up a non-permanent, accordian wall between the first and second grades so they won't see each other. Problem solved.

But not for me. My only memories of first and second grades in that auditorium are muted images and echoey noise. I didn't know how terrible my grades and comments were until I helped clean out my parents house 15 years ago after my Mother had died and my Dad was preparing to sell it. I garnered Ds and Fs both years. "He does not listen." "Poor attention." Disorganized and lack of focus." These were the comments of my first two years in school on the faded reports cards in the lowest drawer of my mother's dresser. She had hidden them. I don't know if she was embarrased by them or she just didn't want me to see them. I ripped them up.

One year before, I had graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. I was awarded a Doctor of Education degree with a 3.85 Summa Cum Laude average. My mother and father sat in the stands at Franklin Field and later at the International House where I was handed my diploma. My mother wept. I suspect that she was remembering those report cards tucked away in her drawer.

Fate being what it is, my wife and I were given the exact same comments in the early 1980s from the pre-school teachers of my son, Jim. "He pulls off his shoe and yells for us to be quiet," one said. "He doesn't pay attention and ignores me when I talk to him," another complained. "My classroom is very active," his Kindergarten teacher told us, "and he's unfocused and becomes very stressed. I suggest that you get him used to multiple sounds by turning on the radio and TV at the same time at home."

My wife, Trish, and I were concerned. Jim ignored us frequently when we spoke to him when he was watching TV. Trish had his hearing tested at the pediatrician's office. He passed with flying colors. Jim's Kindergarten experience was going downhill fast.

But Fate is a quirky thing. One day, Trish happened to hear a report on KYW News Radio. The report said that juvenile delinquents often report that they did very poorly in school because their immediate environment was too noisy. Their low grades over the years made them frustrated and angry. But a new hearing test had been developed that could now uncover a subtle hearing disability called APD, Auditory Processing Disability.

We immedeiately had Jim tested by an audiologist in private practice and an audiologist at St. Christopher's Hospital in Philadelphia. I will long remember sitting in the office at St. Christoper's with Trish next to me when the results were given to us.

"Your son has Central Auditory Processing Disability or APD," the audiologist said. "His normal hearing is fine. But, if there are loud competing sounds, he cannot distinguish between them. This makes it very hard for him to follow directions, remember information presented quickly, and be focused on only one speaker. Somebody sharpening a pencil near him will make him loose information from the teacher or  speaker somewhere else in the room. A loud room will make him very uncomfortable, and he may not be able to distinguish verbal commands or information at all."

My wife and I looked at each other.

"Is this hereditary?" I asked.

"It appears that it's often genetic," the audiologist said. "The good news? You've diagnosed Jimmy early. The bad news? There is no medication or surgery or hearing aid to help him. Your job from now until he completes his schooling is to inform his teachers of his hearing disability. Many won't believe you or they'll forget and some may not care. This is a hidden disabiltity and many people blow off hidden disabilities."

"What do we tell the teachers?"

"He needs to sit VERY close to the teacher. They should write important information and directions on the board or hand out printed information.  Jimmy needs to look at speakers in a loud room to really hear them. He should be away from the PA system and pencil sharpner."

The audiologist stopped and looked at me.

"I'm describing you, aren't I."

"Yes," I said. "I have to sit in the front of the room to hear a speaker. I teach and possibly have the quietest classroom in the world because distracting sounds make it impossible for me to hear my students."

"You were lucky that you survived going through school," she said.

I wasn't lucky. For some reason, my third grade teacher plucked me from the masses in our jammed classroom and had me sit directly in front of her. I was assigned to write the homework assignments on the blackboard every day. Kids stood when they spoke, and she always encouraged me to turn around and look at them. The grades on my third grade report card, tucked in with my Valentines and Mother's Day Cards, stacked with the rest of my family's memorbilia in the top drawer of the dining room china closet, were As and Bs.

My third grade teacher saved my life.

I understand now my need  for quiet. I had battles, at times, with some of Jim's middle school and high school teachers who refused to believe that he couldn't hear them because their classrooms were chaotic or their gym echoed their instructions. We both realize that we do a kind of lip reading in loud rooms or we simply back off to a quieter space.

For myself and all those others who share my way of hearing the world, Mother Theresa's quote rings true: "We need to find God, and he cannot be found in noise and restlessness. God is the friend of silence. See how nature - trees, flowers, grass - grow in silence; see the stars, the moon and the sun, how they move in silence....We need silence to touch souls."

Copyright (c) 2011 by James Hugh Comey

Monday, July 11, 2011

Straight on 'Til Morning

In February 1953, RKO Pictures released a film that would powerfully affect my sleeping and waking hours for years to come. The film was called Peter Pan. It was the largest grossing film of 1953, beating out the likes of: Shane, From Here to Eternity (Academy Award), War of the Worlds, Julius Ceasar (Marlon Brando), and The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms. Walt Disney would go on that year to found Buena Vista Distribution to release all of the rest of his film and TV productions. (His studio was on Buena Vista Street in Burbank, CA.)

I went that winter into Philadelphia with my mother. I was six years old. The city movie theatres back then were wide-screened palaces of sleek marble and glass, grand murals and tapestries. Going into Philly was an exceptional treat. My mother bought me a book version of the movie right there at the theatre, and we stopped at the Automat at Horn and Hardart's for macroni and cheese and baked beans before we returned to Drexel Hill, in the suburbs.

The movie's lush images and music and adventures burned deeply into my six year old imagination. But, the notion that you could fly if you really wished hard enough, and had just a sprinkle of pixie dust, became imprinted on my psyche. For close to 25 years, my dreams were laced with intense concentrations of my will so that my dreaming body would lift slowly off the earth. If my mind stayed focused and strong, I would soar above the roof tops and trees. I could see and hear and feel sensations that were lost to the earthbound. My heart and soul were free.

As time passed, work and responsibilities pressed down on me. There were fewer instances of my trying to fly in my dreams, and, when I could, I would often begin to sink back to earth. Nightmares were often the norm.

But then, when I least expected it, I discovered that I could fly when I was wide awake. It was not drugs or alcohol that released me from the earth. It was a used 1969 305cc Suzuki motorcycle.

As a tiny guy on a tiny bicycle, I had learned balance on the long common driveway behind our twin house on Lasher Road in Drexel Hill. I remember the absolute joy of staying upright for the first time when I pushed off from a wall and peddled like hell to keep moving. I remember the concern the first time I released the clutch on the 305 Suzuki and lurched forward, to stall out. But, I had decades off practicing in my dreams, of focusing and willing myself to be free of the earth. So I tried again, and stalled again. And, again.

Finally, after much jerking and lurching, the Suzuki and I moved forward, with hesitation at first, but finally, after many hours of practice, with flow and grace and confidence.

I rode that 305 Suzuki and an R60/5 600cc BMW motorcycle for a decade or so, until, once again, responsibilities forced me back to earth. College tuitions, my own graduate work, coordinating a school-wide gifted and testing program, teaching at night in a graduate school, all leeched away at my need and ability to escape the earth.

Somewhere along the way, I picked up Peter Pan and Wendy and discovered the caution offered by J. M. Barrie: "...the moment you doubt whether you can fly, you cease forever to do it."

Over the last 10 years, I have regained the freedom and lightness that a two wheeled machine can breathe into the soul. Moving down a shaded country road, the scent of Amish farm or hidden brook or newly mowed pasture thick in the air, there is an openness that is startling. There is no room (or time) for old worries because every second is new and different. Each bump and dent on the road must be seen and considered. Animals, small and large, may appear suddenly. Cars and trucks, with drivers hobbled by cell phone blindness, must be avoided. Your feet are working the gears and the rear brake. Your hands are working the throttle, clutch and front brake. And, all the while, at 65 mph, your balance is holding up a 500 lb marvel of rubber and steel, oil and paint, pistons and power.

I rarely have a destination when I ride with my buddy since 6th grade, Jimmy D. It isn't the arrival that we enjoy. It's the miles on the windy roads, heads in the wind, freedom in our hearts, as we steer a course "second star to the right and straight on 'til morning."

Copyright (c) 2011 by James Hugh Comey