iluvemocharlybrown
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Very Discourged with Anatomy
When you get the "I'm a retard" feeling, try to reframe that feeling as "this is not a subject that comes easily to me" or "this class is not a good fit for my learning style". Don't globalize it. That kind of thing starts to leak out into other areas and makes you feel like a failure at everything. That never helps.
And please don't waste your energy being pissed at the school or trying to make a case against the teacher so you can prove to yourself it is the school's fault you are having trouble. It is likely the class does indeed suck, and the teacher is terrible. So okay, it sucks. Your teacher can't spell. Accept that and work from there. You are in a sucky class, but it is just something you've got to get through in order to graduate.
I'm currently teaching basic musculoskeletal anatomy for a yoga teacher training class. There is a young woman in that class who made this same complaint. "I'm into art. I am no good at math and science!" You don't need math or science skill to learn musculoskeletal anatomy. You need an ability to observe the human body and understand how it works. Approach the study of anatomy like an artist or a dancer. Don't focus on the "medical" part.
What most people think of as the "medical" part is learning the anatomical names. This is not about medicine. This is about language. If you have any knack with language, it is easy. Don't think of the names as random sets of awful syllables. If you want to remember the names, learn what the names mean - it'll help them stick. Foramen magnum = "big hole". Acetabulum = "vinegar cup". Medical terms use and reuse a fairly small set of vocabulary building blocks. (Learning the sanskrit names of yoga poses is the same way. Try to learn them syllable by syllable and you'll go mad. urdhvamuhkasvanasana. But break them down into meaningful bits and you can string them together.) It also makes it easy to give a plausible BS answer on a test that might get you half credit. (This muscle on the back of the forearm... hrm... it extends the wrist... "extensor carpalis"?) You might even get it right.
Then the best advice I can give you is to "squirm through" the class and don't worry that you are going to forget it all. I assure you, if you aren't using it routinely in your professional practice, you will forget it. It doesn't matter! It doesn't make you a bad MT. What makes a good MT is quality of touch and an ability to work with the body.
-- Joshua
Belle said:I feel like I'm retarded, or just not smart enough.
When you get the "I'm a retard" feeling, try to reframe that feeling as "this is not a subject that comes easily to me" or "this class is not a good fit for my learning style". Don't globalize it. That kind of thing starts to leak out into other areas and makes you feel like a failure at everything. That never helps.
And please don't waste your energy being pissed at the school or trying to make a case against the teacher so you can prove to yourself it is the school's fault you are having trouble. It is likely the class does indeed suck, and the teacher is terrible. So okay, it sucks. Your teacher can't spell. Accept that and work from there. You are in a sucky class, but it is just something you've got to get through in order to graduate.
I've always been heavily in the arts and I want to be a writer but thought this would be a great way to have a steady income to support my future plans for having a family, writing, and doing art. I never was good at science, or math, or business in high school.
I'm currently teaching basic musculoskeletal anatomy for a yoga teacher training class. There is a young woman in that class who made this same complaint. "I'm into art. I am no good at math and science!" You don't need math or science skill to learn musculoskeletal anatomy. You need an ability to observe the human body and understand how it works. Approach the study of anatomy like an artist or a dancer. Don't focus on the "medical" part.
What most people think of as the "medical" part is learning the anatomical names. This is not about medicine. This is about language. If you have any knack with language, it is easy. Don't think of the names as random sets of awful syllables. If you want to remember the names, learn what the names mean - it'll help them stick. Foramen magnum = "big hole". Acetabulum = "vinegar cup". Medical terms use and reuse a fairly small set of vocabulary building blocks. (Learning the sanskrit names of yoga poses is the same way. Try to learn them syllable by syllable and you'll go mad. urdhvamuhkasvanasana. But break them down into meaningful bits and you can string them together.) It also makes it easy to give a plausible BS answer on a test that might get you half credit. (This muscle on the back of the forearm... hrm... it extends the wrist... "extensor carpalis"?) You might even get it right.
I don't have much interest in the medical field, I just wanted to work in a relaxing spa environment for my stress level. I thought helping other people relax would be perfect for me, since I can't handle a competitive fast-pace workplace.
Then the best advice I can give you is to "squirm through" the class and don't worry that you are going to forget it all. I assure you, if you aren't using it routinely in your professional practice, you will forget it. It doesn't matter! It doesn't make you a bad MT. What makes a good MT is quality of touch and an ability to work with the body.
-- Joshua