Let's Be Less Stupid: An Attempt to Maintain My Mental Faculties

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For Deb Futter, Gordon Lish, and Susan Morrison
(whose combined IQs total 1473)

Prologue

W
ant to know how stupid I used to be? Before writing this book, I took an online IQ test consisting of twenty-one questions. “Which one of the five is least like the others?” asked the opener. The choices were dog, mouse, lion, snake, and elephant. Another item presented this critical state of affairs: “Mary, who is sixteen years old, is four times as old as her brother. How old will Mary be when she is twice as old as her brother? (a) 20 (b) 24 (c) 25 (d) 28.” Then there were—as there invariably are—numerical sequences, such as this one that requires you to fill in the missing number: “8, 27, ?, 125, 216”—and a genealogical question about people who patently changed their names at Ellis Island (“If all Bloops are Razzies and all Razzies are Lazzies, then all Bloops are definitely Lazzies—true or false?”). One last example: “Which of the figures below the line of drawings best completes the series?”

I knew that IQ tests online have been reported to yield generously higher scores than the professional models (by twenty-eight points, reckons one study), but even so, I thought, aren’t these questions suspiciously manageable? (The answers are b, 64, true, and e). Or maybe my mother was right and I’m brilliant after all, I concluded as I cockily clicked to learn the verdict… which was… get ready: “You have an IQ of seventy-four.” Seventy-four! This is a score that falls into the category described as “low intelligence.” With a score like this, who would have predicted I’d be able to put on my socks unassisted? Apparently the test was timed, a detail I did not grasp when I periodically interrupted my testing to, oh, have lunch and do a few errands, such as voting for the next mayor of New York. This is not an excuse. Any idiot who cannot read the directions deserves an IQ that is a few points shy of “mentally inadequate.” Morally I’m not so adequate, either, but that’s another book (
Let’s Be Less Debauched
).

I don’t even listen to directions when I ask for them—and I ask for them all the time because honestly, in order for me to figure out which way is west, I must place a mental map of the United States in my noggin and then think, “California is left and California is west so ipso facto…” As soon as whomever I’ve accosted for navigational help starts up with “After you go under the underpass, take a left but not a sharp left, and keep going straight until you come to a building with an awning…” my mind is off in another world, mulling over what I should have for lunch because, let’s face it, the real reason I ask directions is to be reassured that it’s possible to get there and that someone exists who knows how.

Yet here I am, about to give you a few pointers on how to read this book. (Hey, if you want to be the author instead of me, who’s stopping you from writing your own book?) First of all, please know that this is not one of those books like
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
or
How to Install a Small to Mid Size Solar & Wind Power Generation System
, in which chronology matters. In these pages you will find a higgledy-piggledy assortment of highfalutin science, lowfalutin science, tests to find out just how stupid you are, exercises designed to make you smarter, games to amuse you, games to amuse me, drawings of the
contents of my skull as rendered by someone (me) who can’t draw, and accounts of me doing everything from learning Cherokee to zapping electricity into my head, all in an attempt to jump off the cognitive escalator heading downward to you-know-where. Both before and after my self-improvement regimen, I underwent MRI scanning of my brain and took a battery of IQ tests—real ones administered by a psychologist (who read the directions aloud to me). If you want to know the results right now, turn to the last chapter. (Don’t tell my publisher I told you this. Let’s keep it between the two of us.)

This book, then, is not only a primer of neuroscience (a sub-primer, I admit), a memoir, a self-help guide, a humor book, and a collection of brainteasers and quizzes, but also a suspense tale. If you are looking for a maritime history or picaresque novel, please go elsewhere.

“I don’t know how to spell. Or they don’t.”

Cathy Schine

JULIE
: The reason you can’t adopt a Boston terrier in Massachusetts is because the laws are so… you know, so… what’s the word for when something’s extremely strict… you know… it begins with a
v
?

CLAUDIA
: Draconian?

JULIE
: Yes.

Julie Klam

“If I could remember the things I forgot I wouldn’t have a memory problem, then, would I?”

Lynn Grossman

“When someone asks you something and you can’t remember quickly, ask them ‘how soon do you need to know?’”

Judy Siegal

“I’ve been washing my hair on and off, seeing if there was any appreciable difference in my own intelligence, concentration, etc. and I’ve noticed that if I don’t wash my hair at all, or if I just rinse it that I feel smarter somehow.… I do
notice that if I wash my hair with bar soap I get the gain in intelligence but it’s not as strong as what I would get if I didn’t shower at all.… The only likely scientific explanation that I can give is that scratching my head/hair on a regular basis if I don’t shower results in increased blood flow to that area, as a result I then get the increased intelligence from doing that.”

Someone on the Internet

what is the word-

there-

over there-

away over there-

afar-

afar away over there-

afaint-

afaint afar away over there what-

what-

what is the word-

Samuel Beckett

What Is Your Mental Age?

DIRECTIONS:

You have two minutes to answer these questions. If you do not have a timer, start counting.

1. What’s the word for the stuff you sprinkle on your food but it’s not pepper? No, not salt but like salt but supposedly better for you because it doesn’t have salt in it?

2. What’s that thing that you put in the thing? The thing you take pictures with.
That
thing. What’s the thing you put inside that?

3. What’s the car that’s not a Toyota Camry?

4. Who’s the guy who isn’t Robert De Niro?

5. What is the little plastic person you play with called?

6. How do you spell the drink that’s made with rum, lime juice, and sugar and comes with a tiny umbrella, and don’t act like you don’t know what I’m talking about?

7.
Do you need tomato paste or do you have some in the cabinet, and “I never use tomato paste” is not an acceptable answer?

8. Off the wagon? On the wagon? Which is the good one, and by good one, I mean the bad one that’s not fun?

9. Remind me which is better: Baptist or Methodist?

10. What number is next?

11. Why is there a Post-it on the cutting board?

 

ANSWERS:

1. NoSalt salt substitute. Mrs. Dash is also accepted.

2. Memory card. “Film” is not accepted. Get with it.

3. Honda Accord

4. Al Pacino. One-half point for Harvey Keitel or James Caan.

5. Barbie

6.
Daiquiri

7. You are on the honor system.

8. I don’t remember.

9. This was a trick question. Quaker. Half-credit for Unitarian.

10. Depends on how you define
next
.

11. I thought
you
put it there.

SCORING:

1 point for every correct answer.

0:
Older than the hills
1–3:
Same age as Father Time’s uncle
4–7:
If you took your gray matter to
Antiques Roadshow
, they’d be impressed.
8–10:
Younger than springtime
11:
Will you write the rest of this book?

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