Oct. 11th, 2007

partly: (Wolvie)
I have a hard time processing "left"/ "right" issues. As in, when people say "Go right" I have to think -- really think -- about which way right is. I would say that more than 50% of the time... my first instinct is to go the wrong way. My daughter -- who when she was younger had the same problem -- tells me: Hold up your hands in front of you, fingers up, thumbs point toward each other; the one that looks like an L is the left. I tell her that they both look like L's to me. That's not exactly true -- it's more like, when I look at my hands side-by-side, I can't remember which way the L is supposed to go. The only way I can reliably distinguish right and left is to pretend to write. Since I know I write with my right, all is good.

I've accepted this shortcoming. People give me hell over it, and it's source of amusement for friends and family, but I can deal. The problem is, of course, that not knowing left from right is way up there on the 'dumb' scale. No matter how intelligent you are, not matter how articulate you sound, not knowing right from left wipes that all out. Head the wrong way and it's "No. Your other right." and Bam! there goes a 100 points off my IQ.

Worse than the right/left thing, though, is the switching of numbers. Take a phone number: 555-4253. If I'm reading that to someone I'm more than likely to say 555-2453. I know that's wrong -- I know it's wrong while I'm saying it, but I can't get the numbers to come out right. And when I try to fix it, the chances are that I'm going to transpose the last two numbers instead of fixing the first two. I have to stop, pause between each number or, better yet, read the numbers as pairs 'forty-two fifty-three' to get it reliably right.

I've taken to telling people that these are signs of dyslexia -- and they are.

I find that I don't transpose letters often. I do, occasionally, write a p instead of a b or a d. More than likely, I transpose entire words. I notice it most when I read aloud. I'll read the words "Jack said" as "said Jack". Is it "quickly went" or "went quickly". I really have no idea because I'm not sure which way it really is, even when I'm looking at it.

Myria has a few of these problems; it was worse when she was younger. My mom has them, too; those are getting worse as she gets older.

I'm not sure if I am dyslexic, but it's nice to have a name to give the problem.

Profile

partly: (Default)
partly

November 2012

S M T W T F S
    1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8910
11 1213 14 15 16 17
18 192021 222324
252627282930 

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 13th, 2025 12:37 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios