Home » ExchangeEveryDay » The Power of Metaphor



ExchangeEveryDay Past Issues


<< Previous Issue | View Past Issues | | Next Issue >> ExchangeEveryDay
The Power of Metaphor
October 31, 2022
‘Adjustment’ means that maybe you can use your thinking power to make things better. You can make something out of your brain.
-Tsuki, age 5

In the newest Exchange Press book, Making Adjustments, author Misa Okayama reflects on the power of using metaphors:

I often find myself speaking in metaphors in my conversations with children, using images and ideas to help us see beyond the immediate context and find unexpected perspectives. I use metaphors in my meditations in this book, too.

…From Kanji to haiku, from Japanese cultural symbols like cherry blossoms to passionate teachers who gave me eyes for seeing connections between things like mathematics and baseball, astronomy and music, I learned that everything is related to everything else. Metaphors are a way for me to explore the connections between things. I believe that metaphors help us look at things from a wider perspective; they help us think beyond what we’re experiencing in the moment and see connections beyond the immediate circumstance.

…In this book, I share the story of Tsuki’s block play. On the surface, her play could be seen as a demonstration of her well-developed construction skills and her social competence. But when I look at Tsuki’s play through the lens of metaphor, the meaning expands and carries me to consider my cultural history, our community’s legacy, and our school’s collective values. When I look through the kaleidoscope of metaphor, I grow new understandings of what it means to be human.

ExchangeEveryDay

Delivered five days a week containing news, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.

What is ExchangeEveryDay?

ExchangeEveryDay is the official electronic newsletter for Exchange Press. It is delivered five days a week containing news stories, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.



Comments (1)

Displaying 1 Comment
Eve Sullivan · October 31, 2022
Parents Forum
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States


This lovely essay (I look forward to reading the book Making Adjustments) confirms a view I have been mulling over recently. There are not just two influences on our upbringing, nature and nurture, but three: nature, nurture and narration. The stories our parents tell us about ourselves and the stories we tell ourselves throughout our lives have an enormous impact on all aspects of our experience. Self-care and decision-making, relationships with family, friends and co-workers, achievement in school and work, our choice of and involvement in leisure activities and our commitment (or lack of it) to service and spiritual life ...all are influenced by those stories. The phrase a dear friend told me once comes to mind: "good to notice". In this case, it is good to notice what we say to children and what we say to ourselves!

(The article that got me starting thinking about ‘the three N’s’ was an article in the October 10, 2022, New Yorker, pp.20-24, “Becoming You: Are you the same person you were when you were a child?” by Joshua Rothman.)



Post a Comment

Have an account? to submit your comment.


required

Your e-mail address will not be visible to other website visitors.
required
required
required

Check the box below, to help verify that you are not a bot. Doing so helps prevent automated programs from abusing this form.



Disclaimer: Exchange reserves the right to remove any comments at its discretion or reprint posted comments in other Exchange materials.