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An Artist Among Engineers   


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The engineering filter
July 23, 2006

Does our parents’ career choice alter the way we look at the world? Maybe, maybe not--unless the parent in question is an engineer, then yes, it most definitely does. I’ve lived my life among engineers, so I claim a certain understanding of the species.

The biggest lesson my engineer father taught me is that it is possible to understand the inner workings of everything. My mealtime entertainment was to ask, "how does _____ work?"--and spend the next half hour happily listening to a full description of the workings of anything from the television to the toaster. All the household appliances were laid out before me, mentally disassembled and spread out in a glorious exploded view. While other girls my age were playing with Barbie dolls, my father and I were building a Ferris wheel with my Erector set or making the light bulb light in my electricity kit.

My father’s disappointment was deep when I announced my desire to become a graphic artist. How could I throw away the gift of an engineering mind? My mother is the artistic one, and it must have been her genes that prevailed. But when you grow up seeing the world through an engineer’s filter, your view is permanently altered.

In this blog I will explore the place where the engineering mind and the artistic mind converge, or don’t. Do you have any stories of life with an engineer, or life as a budding engineer? Please share them by clicking on the comment button or emailing me at neprice@tmworld.com.


Posted by Naomi Eigner Price on July 23, 2006 | Comments (1)


October 28, 2006
In response to: The engineering filter
MarkS commented:

It is amusing that I ran into this piece on the mind of engineers and artists. I've been an engineer 30 years and your description of your table conversations reminded me of my own at home with my daughter. In her junior high years and high school years she was very technically oriented, but in the biological sciences. Some time late in her high school years she discovered creative writing and decided to major in that. It was a pretty radical change in direction that happened over about a 2 year time. I tried to encourage her to do what she wanted to do, but as an engineer, and focused on practical, hard skills that could be applied after graduation from university, I was a little concerned. I'm convinced the her mother's artistic genes kicked in late in high school. I realized that she had a strong desire to be creative in an artistic way, but she also had this very practical, analytical approach to solving daily problems. So unable to keep my mouth shut for any length of time, I used to ask her exactly what kind of a career she was looking forward to with a degree in creative writing. I did not really try to push here in any particular direction, but some time during here junior year, I guess my questions finally got through, but I, for one, had no idea what she would do. Well to make a long story shorter, she finally changed here major to interior design. Where, as she said, she could express her creative self, but employ her practical project management skills to manage all of the aspects of getting a job completed on time. I thought it was a pretty good compromise between practicality and creativity. She makes a very good living now. I'm not trying to take credit for what she did, but if I didn't "think" like an engineer it might have turned out a little differently.





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