Introduction
Flying home at 35,000 feet across the great plains of our midwestern states, I asked my-self this question, “What have I learned from exploring Antarctica and from studying its history, geology, glaciology, literature and art?”
As we flew past the Rocky Mountains and off toward home here in New York City, I thought of some answers and jotted them down on one page of my Journal.
As you will note from the Table of Contents that follows, most of what seemed important had to do with learning to make the most out of our lives: dreaming big, figuring out how to get what we want, solving hard problems, working with others in teams, thinking critically and using our imaginations to the fullest.
Some might say all these add up to becoming successful in life, being able to live life to its fullest, meaning taking advantage of all opportunities we create.
Each chapter has a focus on one aspect of this journey—dreaming of our futures, figuring out how to avoid the pitfalls and crevasses along the way. Within each chapter I have identified what I consider to be the Life Lessons, the general principles derived either from others’ stories or from research on how our minds work. Here you will find Dr. Carol Dweck’s work called mindset: The New Psychology of Success (2006) a substantial support for what we say. Her point is that we have control of our minds, how we think, and our positive thoughts can have a huge impact on our success or lack there of.
For example, we learn that we do not have to live with messages we hear from others or we might say to ourselves such as, “I’m no good at athletics, or science or music.” We can change how we talk to ourselves: “I can get better at anything if I apply myself. . . I can succeed in baseball if I work hard enough, visualize success and learn from experts.”
Our minds and the thoughts we we have are not fixed, written in stone. We can change our attitudes toward ourselves and our pursuits in and out of school.
Our success is just as much the result of how we think about our abilities as those abilities themselves.
But “success” isn’t what life is all about, however.
More significantly I hope the various chapters introduce new ways of looking at our own lives and to persons who have a great deal to teach us—both you and me.
Life is all about what we’re doing now—learning about ourselves and the world.
And enjoying it!
One of the best ways to get the most from what we are experiencing—in school, at home, out on a playing field, or on a job—is to follow the words of the mother of one of our most re-nowned scientists, Isidore I. Rabi, a nuclear physicist who won the Nobel Prize in 1944 for his pioneering work on the characteristics of the electron.
Someone body once asked Rabi how he became a scientist. He told this story:
My mother made me become a scientist without ever intending to do so. Every other Jewish mother in Brooklyn (NY) would ask their child upon returning from school, “So, did you learn anything today?” But not my mother. She asked a dif- ferent question. “Izzy,” she said, “did you ask a good question, today?” That dif- ference—asking good questions—made me become a scientist.”
I hope in reading any of these chapters you keep Izzy’s story in mind and that you will pose your own good questions about the lives of the explorers, astronauts, athletes and others within.
Being inquisitive, asking our own significant questions, can lead us to explore new and challenging territories and it will, undoubtedly, lead to many exciting and enriching discoveries.
I’d be very interested in learning what questions you do ask and are investigating. You can write me at: jbarell@nyc.rr.com.
Best wishes
John Barell
jbarell@nyc.rr.com
www.morecuriousminds.com
New York, NY
July, 2016