This professor wanted to find out what her great grandmother was like and where she got this inner strength that she was reported to have. She felt she needed the inspiration to have the strength to change her life as was needed.
This professor felt somewhat guilty about the fact that she always had people around her helping her with her projects and she helped them in return. She did not do things on her own very well. She always seemed to need that companionship to succeed at anything.
When she traveled to Ireland she learned about the way they lived in the 1800's, very much as a community helping one another. Her ancestors were poor and had a small home with two bedrooms and maybe four to five or more to a bed. She learned about the potato famine in Ireland when the potatos were rotten in the ground. She learned about the peat made from the soil that was used as firewood and how the women had to work along side the men. She learned about her great grandmother who had help from the community in getting her out of Ireland and to "America" in 1892 because she was hungry, yes, physically hungry. And how she had help from others as soon as she arrived.
She came to learn that she didn't need to feel guilty about wanting her 'community' around her in whatever she did, this was to her a genetic 'footprint'.
The statement that interested me is the fact that 'introverts' are those who gain their energy from being alone, and 'extroverts' gain their energy when they are surrounded by others.
Her Irish heritage was one of being with a group, a community, having others around her--she no longer feels guilty about asking a friend to come and exercise with her.
Oh, yes, and Ireland was so beautiful, what a great place to take a trip.
No comments:
Post a Comment