Temple Grandin on Visual Thinking and Animal Behavior

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Newfields

Newfields

11 жыл бұрын

Temple Grandin on Visual Thinking and Animal Behavior
Author, scientist, and animal welfare advocate Temple Grandin brings a unique perspective to the IMA's Planet Indy series. She describes visual ways of processing experience and how her own thinking as a person living with Autism led her to become the designer of more humane livestock handling facilities throughout North America. The animals in these facilities are calm and comfortable; they die a swift, painless death. The result is meat that many experts believe to be healthier for the people who consume it.

Пікірлер: 517
@carleenturner1348
@carleenturner1348 Жыл бұрын
I was a veterinary technician for 20 years, then went to nursing school. Had a nursing instructor who pointed out that people who worked with animals understood how to read body language , which can be a great asset in nursing. I went back to the veterinary field after 3 years working as an RN....nursing was not about the patient, it was about passing meds and paperwork.....
@stanbarr9884
@stanbarr9884 Жыл бұрын
Ttry being an empath and knowing how animals feel.
@christinearbogast6751
@christinearbogast6751 Жыл бұрын
Being an empath was my success with horses from a very young child. Dealing with horses deemed to be dangerous. That couldn't have been further from the truth, but trying to explain that to non-empaths.. 😢
@jereesantacruz6989
@jereesantacruz6989 Жыл бұрын
Correct being a nurse or even a doctor is not about HEALING. Like Hulda Regehr Clark said, "Doctors treat symptoms. I cure diseases." She was a pathologist n said this in court as well ...I believe. Wrote "The Cure for" books only one published now: THE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES"
@frankG335
@frankG335 Жыл бұрын
Scary.
@hollyhopalong7405
@hollyhopalong7405 Жыл бұрын
Yup, you really did practice nursing!
@cynthiahawkins2389
@cynthiahawkins2389 5 жыл бұрын
Ms. Grandin also makes the point to tell her students, and people she meets who are on the autism spectrum..that they are not 'flawed or different'. They merely have a unique way of perceiving the world, and then acting in it. This can be an enormous advantage, if the first thing the autistic person does is receive encouragement and assurance it is not some kind of 'defect'..Bravo, Ms. Grandin.
@monkeymanwasd1239
@monkeymanwasd1239 3 жыл бұрын
its for the best if we describe people via personality rather than disorders
@gusspinochet9685
@gusspinochet9685 Жыл бұрын
'they are not ... different', 'they mere have a unique way of perceiving the world'? this is completely contradictory
@sharcon3891
@sharcon3891 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Grandin
@stillhere1425
@stillhere1425 Жыл бұрын
Only, if they are severely impaired, they suffer.
@prismwashere
@prismwashere Жыл бұрын
I like the emerging term neurodivergent.
@Inigo_The_Son
@Inigo_The_Son Жыл бұрын
Some 10+ years ago, I was waiting in line to board an airplane when I recognized Temple Grandin standing in front of me. We struck up a conversation, which continued onto the airplane. She was seated in front of me, in first class, and she spent much of the flight facing back over her seat to chat with me. Having worked as a chauffeur during college, I had met countless celebrities. For the most part, they were not very impressive, but I was a little star struck to meet Dr. Grandin.
@sophiejoan3189
@sophiejoan3189 2 жыл бұрын
How many times can I hit the "like" button? Thank you Dr. Grandin.
@TeacherMom80
@TeacherMom80 Жыл бұрын
I love this talk! I am thankful for you, Temple Grandin! My husband & I ran an agriculturally-based education program for children 3-12 yrs of age for 8 years. We have Autism in our family. We cared for & educated children with a wide range of developmental needs, including those who were labeled as behavior disordered & kicked out of other schools. Observing the animals was always the first step in the children getting to know the animals -- especially the horses! Children thrive learning this way. God bless you, Temple Grandin. You are a gem! 💖🙏🏼😇
@loujones5388
@loujones5388 Жыл бұрын
When you spoke about schools not knowing how to respond to a math whizz or student interested In engineering, I am reminded of the Arts and Science school my children were able to attend. The main classes had the math and science kids mixed in with the dancers, artists, and theatre kids. It was such a rich experience. My kid who was an artist really enjoyed building things and my theatre kid was good at figuring out how cell phones work, etc. we need more high schools like this. And why is shop no longer offered in many schools as it was back in the day? I learned how to sew in middle school which is a great skill to have. Hands on is the way to go. Thank you for your insightful talk.
@jenniferlong808
@jenniferlong808 Жыл бұрын
You're right! We learned to use a sewing machine, sew on buttons and hem pants. Learned to cook simple meals. Scrambled eggs and such. Mac and cheese. Brownies. Lol. We had football guys in the same class. And they likes it!
@martaholmes4287
@martaholmes4287 Жыл бұрын
My HomeEc class was a disappointment. We girls learned to make pudding. The guys learned how to roast and carve a turkey. I made a long gown, but received little help from our teacher. My friend's Mom helped me complete the project. I think our class was too big for one teacher (25-30 kids). I agree that we need these kinds of classes again with one to one help. Also jobs with long apprenticeships.
@notadumbblond3
@notadumbblond3 Жыл бұрын
Yes! One high school my daughter attended, before we moved, had programs kids could choose, like tech, or arts, etc, and their learning would be geared towards a specific skill, almost like a junior community college/vocational school. My daughter was going to go through the tech program and learn how to build computers and do graphic art. Unfortunately we had to move a year later which put her at a different high school, which then ended with her doing classes online after an emergency surgery. While I'm proud as punch she went to and graduated college with a dual degree, paid for in scholarships, and is now in the middle of her masters for psychology and social work, I wish she had been able to go through that tech program. But, had she not gone where she went, she wouldn't have met some of the people she did and who were instrumental in shaping her path. I still agree and feel like every high school needs to teach every student at least one marketable skill and one useful skill for personal purposes. And get back to teaching rather than having class therapy sessions.
@notadumbblond3
@notadumbblond3 Жыл бұрын
​@@jenniferlong808 Well, y'all did. I took shop and learned power tools can be super dangerous if your aren't careful. And how to make a beer can lamp, an ice scraper, and carve a dog from a block of wood, first with power tools then hand tools. Oh! And I made a leather bracelet and learned about stamping designs in leather. I loved it. But I would have also like to learned to sew.
@GeckoHiker
@GeckoHiker Жыл бұрын
This is the problem where schools don't know how to teach the kids with aptitude. They just bore us to death as they dumb down the curriculum. As a math and science whiz, those mixed classes were absolute torture for me. I slept through school and taught myself math, science, physics, and engineering on my own time. I graduated from high school early to escape the drudgery. Your kids may have enjoyed the mainstreaming, but it really takes away from the education of visual thinkers. This is why the US lags behind in education.
@marydray6171
@marydray6171 Жыл бұрын
I remember going to see Ms. Grandin at RCC in CA. One thing I never forgot is she said it’s important to teach children how to take turns.
@valkyrie1066
@valkyrie1066 Жыл бұрын
So many adults ignore this. They say you learn everything you needed to know in kindergarden...
@sr2291
@sr2291 Жыл бұрын
There were 3 children. One was a rambunctious boy who wanted to be the one to get his way all the time. And two girls. So I used straws in 3 sizes. Made them look the same in my hand, and the children got to pick one each. The child with the large straw got to choose the activity. It helped him accept that everyone had a turn in choosing the activity, and he would get his turn too. Before I did that he was yelling and hitting and wanting his way all the time.
@winterroses2020
@winterroses2020 28 күн бұрын
@@sr2291you bring up an interesting point. Perhaps part of the “selfishness” and impatience is actually anxiety that he couldn’t recognize that he would get a turn.
@dino0228
@dino0228 Жыл бұрын
Brava, Ms Gradin, to both you and your mother. She was clearly instrumental in your success and, in turn, in our ability to learn from you.
@utej.k.bemsel3199
@utej.k.bemsel3199 5 жыл бұрын
I thought about 40 years that i was bad at maths...in january i had for the first time in my live a good maths teacher; he took time to explain it to me and encouraged me to just do it! Now i'm having much fun with mathematics and even did successfully pass a test at my local job center! Not all depends on your intelligence, but a lot of on able teachers!
@melmarsh3247
@melmarsh3247 Жыл бұрын
So so true,. My teachers were overworked underpaid & on top the pupils quite abusive, this didnt leave anything left of the poor teacher for ones who WANTED to learn.
@Jumpingjackflash123
@Jumpingjackflash123 Жыл бұрын
Two types of intelligence are fluid intelligence and crystallized intelligence. One is your ability to run numbers quick and one is what you have learned.
@Number4lead
@Number4lead Жыл бұрын
Me too.
@2rfg949
@2rfg949 Жыл бұрын
just wow. I am like one minute in and absolutely gripped. This woman is an absolute full-force genius. She has one of the most beautiful and penetrating minds I have ever witnessed.
@sr2291
@sr2291 Жыл бұрын
You do realize that no one stopped her, right? Some children are belittled and not allowed to think. Not allowed to progress farther than the other students.
@tjjohnson4848
@tjjohnson4848 Жыл бұрын
Watching this gave me an insight in how to help "autistic" people who are suffering. It's so simple, and completely natural. Hint: The same known cure for depression.
@BelleOfAmherst
@BelleOfAmherst Жыл бұрын
I remember learning Temple’s story about a decade ago. At the time, I was very ill & had to spent hours alone. Temple’s journey was one of many that saved me. She is brilliant. This, coming from a person who eats mostly whole, organic foods. I see her designs as adding some compassion to an industry that will exist in America, with or without her. She’s also a voice for learning how to best work together with each of us contributing our individual gifts. Fascinating! And, if anyone is here & curious about neurological disorders, I believe the book she refers to at one point, regarding the man understanding his dog through the sense of touch, is The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales by Oliver Sacks. I learned so much in this video. Great comments from others too.
@donblosser8720
@donblosser8720 Жыл бұрын
When you say that you eat "organic foods" did you mean vegetables? I realize there are other technical meanings but the root meaning of organic is: "relating to or derived from living matter." On that basis, meat is organic. I do not expect to convert you into an omnivore, just want to encourage you to use clearer language.
@carolpridgeon9387
@carolpridgeon9387 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment.
@BelleOfAmherst
@BelleOfAmherst Жыл бұрын
@@donblosser8720 Point taken. I’ve been called out on the need to use clearer language in the past. There’s a reason it’s difficult for me. I do not eat any meat. I try to have only organically grown foods that are living,, so fresh veggies, fruits, etc. I’ve found that for me, they agree with what my body needs.
@BelleOfAmherst
@BelleOfAmherst Жыл бұрын
@@carolpridgeon9387 Thanks for reading my comment. Temple has so much to teach the world with her life’s journey.
@lmlowe9100
@lmlowe9100 Жыл бұрын
There's nothing compassionate about making it easier (for the industry) to slaught animals for money.
@debstovervillarreal4348
@debstovervillarreal4348 4 жыл бұрын
You are truly one of THE greatest minds of our life time, no doubt! I, too, understand how animals think. I've gotten to groom dogs professionally for 39 years until my husband was dx with ALS 3 years ago. . Animal behavior is not only fascinating but its how we, as people, should behave with each other. Animals and nature exist to teach us lessons and ife lessons all through our lives. If animals aren't involved, I am not interested.
@blackawana
@blackawana Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thank you.
@melmarsh3247
@melmarsh3247 Жыл бұрын
👍
@prismwashere
@prismwashere Жыл бұрын
I just saw the title of this and FREAKED OUT I hav not even watched it but I’m so excited bc I’m guessing it’s going to be about how to talk to animals by visualizing what you want to say. In college there was a chicken coop out on the farm where sustainability was taught. I would walk by the chickens in their enclosure to get to class and that would freak them out a little even if I talked sweetly or gave them treats, they were super skittish until I imagined cuddling their little baby chicks one day like really felt it even. ALL the clucking stopped as I thought this and immediately felt like they understood I would not hurt them. I have never forgotten that experience and use visualization to communicate with animals when ever I get the chance. Once I met a snake in my driveway and asked if we could be friends. I imagined myself as another snake twisted around it like mating and it stayed put watching me. I layed on the ground and put my hand out and it sniffed me like we said hello and it slowly slithered off.
@sarahfalcon3478
@sarahfalcon3478 Жыл бұрын
How weird...i just got a pet mouse ima cat person so im use to a diff bonding. I couldnt get him out his lil nest that he barricade himself in the 1st few days then he started coming out but would run in when i walked by UNTIL the other day something told me to visualize holding him him and loving on him and as hes running towards his nest he stopped and looked at me and came up to the glass for a peak /sniff then went to his nest. I did this again and again bc it was the only thing that made him stop by day three he stopped running and hiding. I had him q month wondering why he wasnt coming around after about a week like petsmart said it would take.. i tried everything for a month and nothing then 3days of loving thoughts now he will take a cheerio from me! That just happened this week im shocked to see your comment on the same day as mine on a TEN YEAR old video!!
@aileen694
@aileen694 Жыл бұрын
​@@sarahfalcon3478 and Prism, I've had similar experiences with animals. They really Can respond to our deliberate visualizing of thoughts.:))
@Janeintheok
@Janeintheok Жыл бұрын
​@@aileen694 exactly. I actually experienced that before.
@karlamccullough8614
@karlamccullough8614 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I became interested in Temple because a family member has been diagnosed with autism. However I'm wondering now if I'm autistic. I thought my thinking was different because I grew up in a dysfunctional family. My mother intentionally did not teach me anything. She had taught my sister how to read at the 3rd grade level and how write cursive before she went to kindergarten. The school wasn't happy because she didn't fit in with the other students. When I started kindergarten I didn't know the alphabet, I had difficulty learning how to read in part because I found reading boring. (A picture is worth a thousand words) I was very much a visual thinker. I was also artistic, I saw more details than most kids therefore my drawings were three dimensional while my classmates drew one dimensional. Because my reading skills were poor I was labeled slow. It didn't help that my mother kept telling me I was stupid, I believed her and really didn't try to learn reading, writing, and math. I constantly doodled, I had problems listening to the teacher. I daydreamed a lot, I was often alone and spent a lot of time in a fantasy world of my own. My self-esteem and communication skills suffered. My artistic skills enabled me to get a job as an illustrator. I was very focused on my work, constantly analysed how to produce more higher quality work. When I left that job they hired 2 people to replace me. I was very analytical, changed careers and became a management analyst. I was always looking, seeing more details therefore my conclusions and recommendations were often better than my coworkers. Years later one coworker told me she and the other coworkers couldn't figure out how I came up with my recommendations. My recommendations were usually better, based on more detail, and when implemented were successful. I had an amazing memory, almost photographic. I could recall details most people didn't even notice. I realized other people thought differently from me and I felt the need to interpret my thinking for them so they could better understand what I was saying. Unfortunately age, menopause, changed everything.
@karlamccullough8614
@karlamccullough8614 2 жыл бұрын
I was really good at becoming a temporary expert on most subjects. I was a bottom up thinker. I was very logical. One of the things I enjoy doing is designing/drawing house floor plans. I did take engineering drawing but I was drawing floor plans before then. When I took a test to determine the career that would be best for me, I scored high as an architect. I'm confident that if I had the education I would have been a successful architect. Now, I have tons of books I had planned to read but I'm ignoring the books. I'm pretty reclusive, more comfortable alone instead of being with people. I'm currently addicted to KZbin.
@shelleysmith1779
@shelleysmith1779 Жыл бұрын
i come from a family of high i.q. social nerds. learning about you made a big positive difference in how i thought about myself. one day i wandered into an online group for people who had aspergers & i saw my life over & over in what they said to each other. i commented that i was glad to know that we aren't just a bunch of losers & screw ups. the most beautiful thing i ever saw was a comment that we weren't losers etc. & never were. thank you temple grandin.
@debralynnpaxton5238
@debralynnpaxton5238 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely LOVE the movie about her life, pioneering works/animal protection, and professional teaching career. She truly is a gift.
@ServiteJack
@ServiteJack 6 жыл бұрын
She is wonderful! What i enjoy most about Dr. Grandin is, is how absolutely honest she is. you can just feel it in everything she shares! never hiding shame or exaggertions.. shes just who she is. and who she Clearly is is so smart and real. and kind.
@anthonystars8933
@anthonystars8933 5 жыл бұрын
There's a book called Butterfly in the Water-you might like-about five people with autism lost in the wilderness after a plane crash. They're with this weird pilot and two teachers-have to rescue themselves. action adventure story, they become heroes-odd & diff
@christinealbright9351
@christinealbright9351 Жыл бұрын
@melodyemanuel219
@melodyemanuel219 Жыл бұрын
I work with pets that have been traumatized. Because animals don't
@ITSERIKAPRICE
@ITSERIKAPRICE Жыл бұрын
Imma look into her alot more thank🎉
@cindyjenkins3431
@cindyjenkins3431 4 жыл бұрын
I love the way Temple Grandin thinks, and enjoy hearing her teach so very much. She's a genius!
@andyjones7121
@andyjones7121 Жыл бұрын
Not sure why this got recommended to me, or why I clicked on it, but I'm so glad I did! Great video!
@MaxNafeHorsemanship
@MaxNafeHorsemanship Жыл бұрын
I have spent a number of years obsessed with understanding horses, so everything she talks about makes perfect sense. Maybe I think in pictures too. I see a lot of things nobody else does and are obvious to me. Clearly we do not all think the same. I saw the movie "Thinking in Pictures" several years ago and it was a huge inspiration to me. We can be different and still be great. Look at Temple. I have always believed that people that were "different" are really gifted and not seen by most of the world for the talented people they are. This woman deserves all the respect she gets. Near the end it was discussed that we use too many drugs to solve problems. My opinion is we far too often look at the symptom instead of the problem (I learned this from horses) and as a result we never fix the real problem. We just create a dependency on drugs.
@AnneAndersonFoxiepaws
@AnneAndersonFoxiepaws Жыл бұрын
Omg I just realised that I think in movies, or rather I never knew it wasn't normal! Maybe that's why animals respond to me so well, because I see like them, I knew the cow was transfixed by the sunbeam and always know what my horses will spook at (to the point where I ask myself "is he reading me in that I can see the paper bag floating up the road, so is he reacting to that or to me seeing it?" That's exactly what I see when you said church steeples, NOT the generalised picture but specific steeples in towns and villages I have seen, in colour. Kolner Dom being the double spires. Amazing, who knew? I thought everyone did what you call bottom up thinking. I love her!
@Anarcho-Pragmatist
@Anarcho-Pragmatist 6 жыл бұрын
Labels can be a road to self-pity and resignation, but they can also be tools of focus for those who feel that they *have* to become a people-pleasing multi-talented extrovert to get by in life. I never had a label and because of this it took me a long time to accept the fact that I'm just not wired to be a people person because, growing up, this was presented to me as the main attribute of a successful person.
@simonesmit6708
@simonesmit6708 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. My mother was a very social and outgoing person. She thrived on being around people and loved visiting and helping others. Me, not so much. But I did learn reasonably good communication skills by emulating her. But I need a lot more alone time than she did.
@evagrowney734
@evagrowney734 Жыл бұрын
You go Temple !!! I luv your work. I am an architect. Went to RISD. LUV your whole story...following you for years. You are brilliant !!!
@melindamc1438
@melindamc1438 Жыл бұрын
Someone made a comment below asking why the audience is laughing. We're laughing for a couple of reasons (I wasn't in the live audience, but I loved this talk and found it very humorous). Firstly, because she's pointing out how absurd it is that we "typical" people think in the rigid way we think. It's surpising and funny to realize there's a different and perhaps better way. We're so used to being the norm. Secondly, people are there to be entertained and she's very entertaining. When it's dark in the audience and you're in a big group, I think your tendency is to laugh at stuff that you might just smile at in another context. Thirdly, because it's just funny?! I think Dr Grandin is also playing up the humour too. While you can't read the minds of the people in the audience, safe to say at least 95% of people are enjoying this talk and certainly not laughing AT her and the way she presents, in case that's what the commentor was concerned about.
@kellyalves756
@kellyalves756 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, for someone who struggles with emotional intelligence, she’s certainly fantastic at crowd work. “They’re gonna slip on the coffee and fall on their little tukus!”
@melmarsh3247
@melmarsh3247 Жыл бұрын
Yes, She knows ppl arent mocking but laughing with appreciation,,
@NS-pf2zc
@NS-pf2zc 4 жыл бұрын
She is so fascinating!! I dont have autism, I don't think, but some of what she describes in thought processes describes how my brain works.
@sharonhearne5014
@sharonhearne5014 Жыл бұрын
I have noticed this too with a clash between two of my conflicting skills sets where they can almost “X” each other out.
@mischevious
@mischevious Жыл бұрын
I thought everyone else could see in pictures and set the pictures in motion too. Guess that’s why they call me McGyver.
@kellyalves756
@kellyalves756 Жыл бұрын
That still of the explosion with the caption “They Forgot About Process Safety” needs to be made into a motivational poster. 😄
@pechoja
@pechoja Жыл бұрын
I just love this woman, and she is such a rich resource that we have not known before and has contributed so much, like need people who think in different ways to plan a project. Yes, why do so many things we do fail, like bridges and nclear power plants built on fault lines. She mentioned she knew how to solve some of the problems with our power network so that we can stay functional. Has she been consulted and involved in the planning of this most important weakness America is facing that coud bring us down. For heavens sake please get her enlisted as we need her perspective. She is a genius.
@anthonybrakus5280
@anthonybrakus5280 3 ай бұрын
I found Dr. Grandin in the 90s. I think it was a NOVA Science Now episode. I was immediately very interested and I admired her accomplishments. The show I saw talked about a stantion she designed that would squeeze the cows to calm them. She also made one for herself and when she would feel overwhelmed with input she would climb in and get squeezed. It was too cool. I followed her career with enthusiasm and can officially say that she is my hero!
@Love.Is.Empathy
@Love.Is.Empathy 11 ай бұрын
Thank God for Temple Grandin..and may we discover many more gifted as her ❤
@MagnoliaPantherWoman
@MagnoliaPantherWoman Жыл бұрын
I had a photographic memory, then lost it to illnesses. My mind started using auditory memory after listening to ASMR. It's cool to know I was bad at algebra for a reason, but good at geometry, writing, dance, woodshop, planning, and project management. I love science and nature too and was fortunate that mentors pointed out a career I'd excel at and enjoy. What a ride!
@zhenxinbei726
@zhenxinbei726 Жыл бұрын
This has been more informative than four years of psychology courses when it comes to studies of the learning ability of the human and animal mind. I also recognized strengths and weaknesses I experienced growing up, and wished my career coaches/counselors had known about this. A fascinating lecture! Thank you!
@lessismore6549
@lessismore6549 Жыл бұрын
So happy i discovered her, it opens a whole other world!
@junemoores1146
@junemoores1146 Жыл бұрын
'Different minds and bodies working together to create'. That's the spark of life. That is the BIG BANG.
@tericarter2019
@tericarter2019 Жыл бұрын
O loved that she had this kind of patience for the care of her subjects...very sensitive and interesting and briliant.
@nancyewood
@nancyewood Жыл бұрын
Amazing, amazing person -- and she's teaching something HUGE and incredibly valuable... and if enough people hear her, her message could change the world for the better. Ms. Grandin is expressing -- live and in person -- an example of how to more fully BE as ourselves... and oh, the richness of it!!! She's a delight -- authentic and just herself, and she likes herself, and likes being herself... and then shines that fullness on others -- the animals -- to uplift them too, in service. I'm so inspired. And I encourage you to just read on through the other Comments that have been left here below -- there are so many stories filled with gratitude and echoing the breadth and depths of experience offered by Ms. Grandin -- she's made a safe space here, an appreciative, grokking, trusting place where others can be authentic as well -- and we're all lining up eagerly to share the expansion and appreciation and mutual encouragement -- it feels so good! And it's just wonderful to watch her as an expression of the positive law of attraction in a video, turning into results in black & white, right before our eyes here, as so many express themselves willingly and appreciatively. I'm certainly filled with gratitude for her, and for this experience, and for everyone who came forth to share... Thanks to Temple Grandin, and to you all. To me, this is how it's meant to be and to feel on our planet, in our global human community.
@JennyFB1281
@JennyFB1281 3 жыл бұрын
In the US, there's a growing shortage of people who work in the trades/hands on jobs because everyone pushes their kids to go to college because jobs in the trades aren't as respected, for some reason.
@TwoPartyIllusion
@TwoPartyIllusion 3 жыл бұрын
I've been a fan of her work for ages. I'm loving these new (to me) lectures! She sews too! I can make a pillowcase :/ but I can understand her invaluable information the world has been blessed with. She's taught me so much. ♡ Thank you
@prismwashere
@prismwashere Жыл бұрын
Cut a hole in the short seam of your pillowcase and you have a tank top 😁
@PonyExpressway
@PonyExpressway 11 ай бұрын
One of the most captivating lecturers and minds.
@stovepipe9er
@stovepipe9er 3 жыл бұрын
I just learned I’m a visual thinker. Looking at things it baffled me how others couldn’t look at something and see that there was a serious flaw in their idea. Try and explain it and they just couldn’t conceptualize what the problem was, and I’m looking at it seeing it plain as day.
@joewright6455
@joewright6455 Жыл бұрын
I got to meet her in the mid 90's. Such a cool person.
@babystepsgarden6162
@babystepsgarden6162 Жыл бұрын
I have always thought in pictures. Words are easier to write than speak. Around our house, "Please take the dishes out of the dishwasher and put them in the dryer" (for instance) elicits "Mom.... you're doing it again." Then chuckles, and the clothes would be transferred from the washer to the dryer. 😂. Gotta love my thinking / speech patterns! My husband says my baud ( not sure if I spelled it correctly) rate is off. He says it comes from thinking faster than I can speak. I can write better than I speak, probably because I am forced to slow down. Also, sometimes I can not tell you the name of an object, (again, I've always been this way.) but I can tell you the shape, color, size, what it's used for, how you use it, where it's located, exactly, in the house, yard, store, etc. I use to think there was something wrong with my communicating skills. But it's not that. I just think in pictures. 😀 It is truly awesome to find I am not alone in this ability. Thank you for taking the time to give this talk! You are awesome! ❤❤❤
@notadumbblond3
@notadumbblond3 Жыл бұрын
You know this just made me remember the first time I ever was given laughing gas in a dentist office for a cavity filling. I was laying back in the chair while they were working on my mouth and looking up at the ceiling, this was back in the early 80s, and I literally watched a whole Flintstones cartoon or two, totally brought up from memory, while they worked on my mouth. Huh. That explains a LOT.
@l.nelson3093
@l.nelson3093 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Temple, Dr.Grandin, you are a superhero to me!
@margaritastojanov6068
@margaritastojanov6068 Жыл бұрын
Why is this wisdom not required from educators' preparation yet?
@mikestone9129
@mikestone9129 5 жыл бұрын
Everyone should watch this video. Temple is an awesome lady.
@Patricia-cf1be
@Patricia-cf1be 4 жыл бұрын
I love her, she’s lovely and so smart
@au9parsec
@au9parsec 3 жыл бұрын
I agree with Temple that the education system has not been doing a good job at preventing the younger generation of geeks and nerds from becoming video game junkies.
@cherryvaleleatherock6900
@cherryvaleleatherock6900 Жыл бұрын
@@au9parsec It's part of the Plan, sad to say.
@ucanleaveyourhaton
@ucanleaveyourhaton Жыл бұрын
Temple Grandin is the best of the best ! A true treasure. ❤️🌈
@lucyflorey9152
@lucyflorey9152 Жыл бұрын
I loved her book. I grew up on a farm with sheep, horses, pigs, cattle and chickens. I spent a lot of time with our cattle and horses. I could instantly tell when a cow or horse was going to kick or bolt or bite. But it wasn't because I was sharp like her, it was because I started being with the horse herd at 3 years old. By being kicked, bucked off and bit, I got really savvy at reading their body language. I was too horse crazy to quit.
@sheilasmith1109
@sheilasmith1109 11 ай бұрын
My family told me that I couldn't go to kindergarten if I kept telling everyone what the horses, cats and dogs on our farm were telling me! I swear I used to have telepathic conversations with them and thought pictures, but now days, people make a living telling owners what these animals are trying to tell their owners. Shame on my family! Though, sometimes I can still tune in to them, it's not as often or strong... I miss those days!❤
@Jackn96288
@Jackn96288 Жыл бұрын
我今天看了一部由格蘭丁女士 從小到大 一路上的心路歷程為題材的電影 <自閉歷程> 🎬 電影真的非常好看也很感人 我是看到最後才知道 原來是真人真事所改編的電影 於是上來youtube看看格蘭丁女士的相關視頻 演說中的語氣表情和動作真的會讓我很想聽 但很可惜的是 我英文不好😅
@hexane8
@hexane8 Жыл бұрын
Interesting to hear a woman speak plainly and not soaked in qualifiers, superpoliteness, rising intonations, hesitating, delicate, tentative, self-deprecating and hypermodesty. All the stuff I've learned to add so people are nicer. Cool to hear her matter-of-factly state her gifts and talents and the thing she's excellent at the same way she says the things she's not good at.
@evelynkorjack2126
@evelynkorjack2126 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU! I cant tolerate listening to people reading the news, the only way i could describe it was "sing song fake kindergarten teacher"...you have given me some better descriptions.
@erinjean9971
@erinjean9971 Жыл бұрын
🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻 finally someone that can explain MY brain too. I love getting lost in “playing” in my mind. This is also how I dream. I’m always trying to figure out ways of doing things, creating systems, practicing skills all in my visual mind. I also can read animals very well, we connect and I use cat behaviours to bond with my cats. I’m totally a geek.
@rickebuschcatherine2729
@rickebuschcatherine2729 6 ай бұрын
Thanks from France for that I like so much the courage and the work of this woman!
@stanbarr9884
@stanbarr9884 Жыл бұрын
When Temple talked about being at the project and taking in every line, I resignated. When I was a general contractor, and had a remodeling project, I liked to do what I called, "sit with it". I'd go sit walk, etc and get a feel for the project. I'm not going to self diagnose as being on the autistic spectr, em?, or im?, But I also thing in pictures and have told others this. I had speech therapy as well. Hmmmmm?, interesting. I'm also a designer and inventor. I'm working on a micro camper made of 95% recycled materials. It's in my head, I've got to start collecting materials. I've built two cabins out of pallets and reclaimed materials. I'm a visual learner. I'm terrible with spelling and grammar
@cidlagunas4234
@cidlagunas4234 7 жыл бұрын
awesomeness. learned more with your presentation than I did through years a years in school trying figure out how to relate why I could not read or write until 4th grade. I used to think I was dumb.
@frankG335
@frankG335 Жыл бұрын
No way. A friend of mine's son didn't SPEAK until he was 7 years old, but she treated him normally because she could tell he was smart. He graduated summa cum laude from a top university, has been accepted to law schools and has friends who have his same very narrow interests- Russian music and culture from the 1910s. She thought, "How is he going to find any friends in college with old Bolshevic music pouring from his car?" Damn. The next time she saw him, he was in a car with 4 other kids, all listening to old Bolshevik military music, wearing old Russian style clothes, singing, and they've become life long friends. Let your freak flag fly HIGH! Be yourself - everyone else is taken, and like her, ignore the haters and find like minded people. Temple Grandin has found friends among other animal behaviorists like Sy Montgomery, and has gone ahead and asserted her ideas and followed her own interests. You can do that too! See how she learns about her own mind works and then asserts it as in, "Here's how my mind works and Here's how that's an advantage!" And do that. To heck with what lame people with no understanding think! You can find like minded people if you have the courage to pursue what truly interests you and do it to the best of your ability. Find something that makes you feel happy to study or learn or do, and do that. She ended up re-designing the entire cattle industry, but she didn't start with that. She started with finding where she WAS able to thrive and then going for it. You're NOT dumb. The school system is designed to make good little workers. Maybe you're a different kind of thinker, and you process things differently. Thank GOD! We need people like you! You've got a real, divine purpose (not because of some religion) and your brain is a treasure in its uniqueness!
@nancyewood
@nancyewood Жыл бұрын
@@frankG335 Absolutely brilliant and kind and wonderfully uplifting support, Stacey! You are a lovely person who beautifully expresses empowerment and such helpful, encouraging approval, and I too personally enjoyed reading all your wise words and feeling your supportive gaze and smile. I love that you said them to @cidlagunas4234, and I took your words in for myself as well, knowing they could be about me too. Many, many thanks.
@aileen694
@aileen694 Жыл бұрын
​@@frankG335 Stacey, clearly and beautifully said!
@stanbarr9884
@stanbarr9884 Жыл бұрын
I just had to chuckle, when she talked about the young person with no practicle experience. As a builder, and haaven taken draqfting in high school, I have said many times, "An architect should spend four years in the construction/building trade".
@valk7229
@valk7229 Жыл бұрын
True genius. And to think that a "different" label and a parent without understanding could have wasted a tremendous brain and life.
@stibbydibby
@stibbydibby Жыл бұрын
Excellent talk! This woman is amazing!
@dawndid5972
@dawndid5972 Жыл бұрын
Temple = Serotonin smiles ❤ God bless her mom who elegantly taught her daughter how to be a REAL human edu model Some personalities are PURE LOVE like hers. I'm on my tuchas laughing at her subtle humor with JOY
@gigiquillian4776
@gigiquillian4776 Жыл бұрын
Music and art should be mandatory in public schools as it is in homeschooling. It's not mandatory there but is respected as a necessary part of over all educational health.
@AndrewKendall71
@AndrewKendall71 5 ай бұрын
I think I just re-learned that not everyone thinks in movies in their heads. I'm 52, and this explains why I have to execute my designs fully in order for clients to understand at all what I'm talking about doing. This also explains why I'm so fast at executing workable stuff, because I'm running contingencies before I even start. And I'm bad at algebra - I made it through college algebra because of it being explained well by a 22 year old double PhD in math who was an extraordinary thinker. She understood some of this apparently. What an important individual Temple is in working through and explaining user-oriented visual process thinking.
@dukecity7688
@dukecity7688 Жыл бұрын
Thank you algorithm for sending me Temple. I was glued to this. It's going to be a marvelous journey -
@JaneDoe-ql7sc
@JaneDoe-ql7sc Жыл бұрын
She's one of the greatest geniuses ever! I love her personable approach! Puts the listener at ease! Like being with a friend! 🙂
@gigiquillian4776
@gigiquillian4776 Жыл бұрын
The good this woman has done for humanity through the good she's done for animals, is probably never to be repeated. May her days be long and carefree.
@sarahmoynihan7302
@sarahmoynihan7302 Жыл бұрын
The good for animals? Isn't it a betrayal to use an understanding of the way animals think to make it more effective to kill them?
@joanroark4857
@joanroark4857 11 ай бұрын
Loved reading Temple's work and listening to her talk. It made sense to me (teacher/geek/mother of 3).
@terriejohnston8801
@terriejohnston8801 Жыл бұрын
1st Time to listen to you, or EVEN to learn of your brilliant approach to helping folks under the wide spectrum of autism. Excited to follow you & ur teachings ..MUST OF BEEN LIVING UNDER A ROCK. .
@redprimo8058
@redprimo8058 11 ай бұрын
I'm a visual thinker and didn't know that not all visual thinkers can test something in their mind. I can see a design in my mind and I'm able to rotate it and see it from all angles.
@WinkLinkletter
@WinkLinkletter Жыл бұрын
I noticed the other day, while in the middle of my room trying to clean and organize, that, although my eyes were open I was not looking at the mess and furniture in my room, but was instead looking at a ‘video’ in my head superimposed over the actual visual input I was getting from the actual space itself and doing all the experimental heavy lifting inside my mind.
@seaofglass77
@seaofglass77 Жыл бұрын
When she told about the mayor who waited until her owner got home to have the colt I almost cried! I had a cat that did the same thing to me. She waited until I was home from school and settled on my bed to start having her kittens.
@rosemariemann1719
@rosemariemann1719 Жыл бұрын
Sarah, do you mean " mare" , rather than " mayor"? 🇬🇧🌈🥀☺️🇬🇧
@charlottemcginn8796
@charlottemcginn8796 11 ай бұрын
I could listen to her all day, I wish they would just put her in charge of revolutionising the educational system.
@anzaborrego399
@anzaborrego399 Жыл бұрын
Nutrition that enables neuroplasticity would be a great help for many autistic people. Our brains continue to develop for all of our lives. Meat, eggs, and seafoods are the way to go.
@guloguloguy
@guloguloguy Жыл бұрын
....WOW!!!!!! THANK YOU, TEMPLE GRANDIN, FOR THIS VERY INTERESTING, AND WELL EXPLAINED DEMONSTRATION, OF THE "VISUAL THINKING" PROCESS, AND ANIMALS, (AND PEOPLE) REACT TO THE ENVIRONMENT AROUND THEM.💝💖💛
@buggjohnson1648
@buggjohnson1648 Жыл бұрын
I don't know why, but I just love her. Being from the south I think maybe she reminds me of someone I knew once. Nor just her way of thinking that I relate to, it's something in her speech and mannerisms, Idk. This video was so helpful in showing me how to explain things to others.
@abentco
@abentco 6 жыл бұрын
This was wonderful. I'm going to check out Temple's book. Thanks
@rebeccajourney3183
@rebeccajourney3183 Жыл бұрын
I love Temple Grandin❣ God bless her😊
@shelbydecker8447
@shelbydecker8447 5 жыл бұрын
I get to see her today and I'm beyond excited
@joecrowaz
@joecrowaz Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad they made a movie about her. I may have never known about her, and I was born and raised in Arizona!
@junemoores1146
@junemoores1146 Жыл бұрын
I believe you're the first teacher I absolutely admire.
@davidluftig4644
@davidluftig4644 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful! Thanks for putting this up. I am a great admirer of Temple. And I do a lot of visual thinking and design myself.
@johnmartlew
@johnmartlew 2 жыл бұрын
That thumbnail picture is priceless. Temple Grandon and happy steers.
@meretriciousinsolent
@meretriciousinsolent Жыл бұрын
I also love that she isn't seeking to confirm one agenda or another - she just wants to get the bottom of the matter each time. Are cattle scared of dying, or is it something else that's putting them off? Such a potentially loaded question. An important one to discern the answer to. Focusing on the truth in front of us instead of aligning ourselves to an ideology is so important.
@mcdowell1953
@mcdowell1953 Жыл бұрын
I love you and your mind and teachings. Thank you Temple
@markwilliams3174
@markwilliams3174 Жыл бұрын
What a brilliant woman. What a brilliant public speaker
@combatmedic91-b76
@combatmedic91-b76 Жыл бұрын
This Lady is wonderful & a blessing to cows & her teaching is a blessing to all!
@candace3124
@candace3124 Жыл бұрын
I saw the movie about her life some time ago. Temple Grandin is an amazing woman.
@tynettelima4434
@tynettelima4434 Жыл бұрын
I can take a movie of something sometimes. In Astronomy, he asked was it twinkling, I said hold on & played it back without thinking and he said to me," I can tell by where your eyes just went you were out there." I can try to take a movie of something & fail. Sometimes I try& I can. I wish I could control what my Grandpa called," Pull up your identic imaging."
@deniselove1585
@deniselove1585 Жыл бұрын
You are SO interesting to listen to. The world is better with you in it! God bless.
@canileaveitblank1476
@canileaveitblank1476 Жыл бұрын
I’m 60yo. I always thought seeing it “in your minds eye” was a figure of speech, not literal. I have no “mind’s eye” viewer, it’s a black, blank space. Recently, I discovered this is something labeled as “Aphantasia,” and affect’s about 1-5 percent of general population.
@marcypadrta9177
@marcypadrta9177 Жыл бұрын
Wow! I have always thought in "movie form"! My memory goes back to when I was 2 years old- and memories flash like videos in my mind.! And body language always is a truer testing stone than what people will tell you. Perhaps this all is why I get along so well with plants and animals!!
@typrus6377
@typrus6377 Жыл бұрын
Went to school in Loveland. Remember the building program being available. Wasn't my thing, but shop was. They got rid of the shop class, drafting, and machining building a couple years after I graduated.
@lizgallagher878
@lizgallagher878 Жыл бұрын
So sad. I wanted more "shop" classes. Being in school in the 60-70's, it was difficult for females to get the opportunities. Even after school, only the Army was willing to train me. But I didn't want to be trained to kill. Also, back then, there was so much sexual abuse, it would have broken me down in a bad way.
@kewlade719
@kewlade719 Жыл бұрын
I have ADHD. Poor working memory great long term . Admirer of Temple, a pioneer in industrial farming safe handling of animals. WHISH there were many more people people who thought like Temple working in the industry!
@leslieh4899
@leslieh4899 Жыл бұрын
You are just Brilliant! My mom told me in the 40's if you were not college material (books and math etc) you spent 10-12 grade in a trade school. What a concept!
@markgotschall2914
@markgotschall2914 Жыл бұрын
I live in Fort Collins and met her standing in line at the DMV she said her name is Mary as she introduced herself to me at the renewing our driver's licenses, quite an interesting person.
@piggy310
@piggy310 Жыл бұрын
Democrat motor voter?
@liennitram9291
@liennitram9291 Жыл бұрын
This lady is fascinating. I recently found her on Jordan Peterson Podcast, but I've seen her before. I just didn't know anything about her. I'm very glad I took the time to listen.
@ImSPOTon
@ImSPOTon 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing woman......very interesting and I really like her accent and listening to her speak
@geogriapeach5211
@geogriapeach5211 Жыл бұрын
Always amazing. Learing something new.
@stevengill1736
@stevengill1736 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating stuff, thank you Temple....
@zippermonster9596
@zippermonster9596 Жыл бұрын
I think my husband and daughter have her thinking style. My son is more like me words and emotions, but he is a boy and had a knack for observation of mechanical things. He wants to drive tractors. I have so much to learn from this wonderful woman on how to guide my children’s education, and how to communicate better with my husband.
@Silvermoonscorpion
@Silvermoonscorpion 8 ай бұрын
As an extremely visual learner who also has synesthesia I fully agree that the hands on classes being tossed aside in schools and only working on test scores is IMHO very accurate. The building a home and learning geometry would have been brilliant. Sitting in class just listening, my brain will definitely go for a walk. Several in fact, many miles worth before I'll realize I went off track... ADHD.. Had I had to construct something and learn math through that process, I'd of excelled. Temple, you're a genius.. I've said for awhile that while the spectrum aspect is true, that dx's of Austim and ADHD and such are not handicaps as we understand them. There's great brilliance there. I agree with her about pills as well. I would love to speak with her.
@frankglass0069
@frankglass0069 Жыл бұрын
Wow! I can also test run mechanical ideas. I've also found that people are lost when I draw things out and KNOW if it ll work after my imaginary test run.
@frankglass0069
@frankglass0069 Жыл бұрын
I found shortcuts I algebra one. The teacher gave me an f. Same answer. F.
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