"The best Pizza in Metro Detroit" including Weight Watchers CEO Florine Mark — who admitted to being directionally challenged and were willing to share their experi- ences, both humorous and poignant. "Florine Mark told me she lived in a neighborhood with winding streets, and sometimes while on a walk, she would get lost and have to stop at someone's house and ask how to get home," says Grekin. One woman told me she has trouble finding her way back to her table at a restaurant after going to the restroom. And there was one man who was so determined to find his way, he put a compass in his car. But he put it in with a magnetic screwdriver, and wherever he went, the compass pointed to the screw!" Grekin found people whose lives were altered because of their poor sense of direction. There was a busy mother who never joined a carpool, not because she was concerned that her child might be at risk in some- one else's car, but because she was concerned that if she took other children home, she would be unable to find their houses. Forging ahead, Grekin set out to get to the root of the problem. She spent countless hours at the library and on the Internet, searching for answers, but could not find any expert or study on the subject. "I tried to read as much as I could, but I had a terrible time," says Grekin. "I found a lot of research about spatial ability and map reading, and how to construct parks and malls so that people can easily make their way through them, but I didn't find much about why people have a bad sense of direc- tion." So Grekin designed a survey. With the results of her findings, in conjunction with her extensive research on spatial ability, she came up with a theory. "I believe that people who don't have a good sense of direction prob- ably lack the abilityto mentally rotate," she says. "Mental rotation is a spatial ability that people either do or do not have. I think the inability to rotate the landscape when you change directions or go from upstairs to downstairs is what causes a disorientation and a lack of a directional sense." By the time Grekin finished I'll Never Get Lost Again, which is her first book, she was reassured that there are millions of others just like her. Grekin, the daughter of Abe and Ruth Zitomer and daughter-in-law of Jack and Zivia Grekin, graduated from Detroit's Mumford High School. She went on to earn a bach- elor of arts degree in journalism and a teaching certificate at the University of Michigan. After teaching English at Belleville High School, Grekin moved to Boston and developed a drama program for nursery school children. Six years later, after return- ing to the Ann Arbor area, she taught drama for Ann Arbor's recre- ation department, where she became drama supervisor. She also worked as a poetry and drama consultant for the Ann Arbor Public Schools. In the early 1980s, Grekin co- founded Around Town, an Ann Arbor company that provides tours around the area. She also did free- lance writing for the Ann Arbor Nezvs. She went back to school and earned a master of arts in education- al curricula at the University of Michigan in the spring of 1997, and joined the staff at Hillel. Grekin and her husband have three children — Joe, a lawyer in Detroit; Josh, a musician in New York; and Emily, a graduate student in psychology at Emory University in Atlanta. The new author believes that both people with and without a good sense of direction can benefit from her book. "I want those with no sense of direction to know they're not alone, and I want those who can easily find their way around to be tolerant," she says. "There is a real reason why people can't find their way, and yelling or getting upset does absolutely no good. "I also hope that directionally challenged people will take their loss of a sense of direction with a sense of humor," Grekin adds. "I hope they will have the courage to venture out, even if they might get lost. And to know, if they are lost, they will be found." ❑ Linda Grekin will sign copies of Never get Lost Again at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 27, at Borders, 30995 Orchard Lake Road, in Farmington Hills. I'll Never Get Lost Again also is available at Little Professor Books and Rand McNally. "Tops on my list... Their Filet Mignon" John Tarasychuk Detroit Free Press January 8th, 1999 • Pasta Specialties • Pizza • Steaks• Chops • Poultry • Seafood • Cocktails OPEN DAILY - LUNCH & DINNER OPEN WEEKDAYS UNTIL 2:00 AM WEEKENDS UNTIL 3:30 AM A Ferndale Favorite Since 1961 1111 , COMO'S Italian-American Family Restaurant Woodward at 9 Mile • (248) 548-5005 Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 OUVOLMOMMEMZSEMLVAVASUMMISIEdt 3/19 1999 Detroit Jewish News 85