I felt the same way until I had to take a statistics class for a second bachelors I’m working on as a 40 year old. The class was “statistics for non STEM majors” and the extremely chill, aging surfer dude prof approached it like we were all easily spooked horses and math was a snake.
He didn’t even tell us when we took our midterm, he told us it was a quiz that he was offering lots of extra tutoring sessions for. He didn’t tell us until weeks later when someone asked when the midterm would be. He really went out of his way to explain down to the roots of each equation about how and why it works.
By the end of it I didn’t feel like I was missing the part of my brain that can do math anymore.
rockSlayer@lemmy.world 8 months ago
You might have dyscalculia. It’s best described as ‘math dyslexia’ and heavily impacts a person’s ability to do math
FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 8 months ago
It could be, but I don’t mix up numbers, I just can’t grasp concepts. Equations mystify me.
agent_flounder@lemmy.world 8 months ago
I wonder if I have this.
One of the symptoms of ADHD, as I understand it, is difficulties with symbol decoding (I think that is what it is called). I think it may be related to poor working memory. Say you want to decode a substitution cypher. With ADHD you have to keep referring back to the decoding chart more often than those without. (I took a test on this as part of my diagnosis and I sucked at it).
I think maybe that affects understanding equations with all the symbols and Greek letters and such?
FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 8 months ago
That may be my problem. My daughter was diagnosed with ADHD and although I’ve never gotten an official diagnosis, her symptoms are pretty similar to my experiences, so it’s entirely possible I have ADHD and this is an ADHD thing.
agent_flounder@lemmy.world 8 months ago
ADHD is very heritable, almost as much as height. So it is pretty likely, indeed.