A little six year old girl looks
up to her mother and asks,”Ma! When will I be writing like my friends? All of
us started writing at the same time. They’re writing and drawing so nicely, why
does my writing look like this? Am I stupid?”
A touching question by a
little girl, who is troubled by the fact that her handwriting is indecipherable
to others. If it’s just a question of bad handwriting, why am I going forth
with this blog? What is my objective? There are two very powerful reasons
behind my writing this blog and trying to get it across to millions of
readers out there. One, to try and answer the queries of parents and teachers
of children who have been struggling with learning difficulties for a long
time, and two, to let these children, who have been called ‘stupid’ and ‘slow’
all their lives, know that they are not!
Some children are extremely
different from their peers. Some might be slow to grasp concepts, some might
have trouble with their motor coordination, some might struggle to speak
ordinary sounding words, some simply have trouble looking at an object and
understanding its significance. These kids are usually put into brackets like
“slow”, “stupid”, ”not motivated”, ”mentally retarded”,”hyperactive”, ”destructive”
and so on. These are the kids you usually find in the last row of the
classroom, laboring over the classwork, struggling to understand the teacher’s
rapid teaching and grappling with their homework at home.
The little girl, mentioned
earlier, watches a science show on TV with intense concentration. After
it’s over, she asks her mother,” I have understood that the earth moves around
the sun and the moon moves around the earth. If, for some reason, the earth
falls down, what will happen to the moon?” The mother is nonplussed and starts
thinking. Without giving her time to ponder upon the first question, the little
girl now asks,”Ma, why do we need a rocket to launch a satellite in space? Why
can’t an aeroplane do the same job?” Mentally retarded? Stupid? Slow to
understand? I think not. On the contrary, the girl is displaying a serious
knack for science and scientific thinking. This little girl, with her sunny
smile, extensive vocabulary and a charming disposition wins hearts everywhere
she goes.
But let me tell you she is also dyslexic.
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Thanks for your interest in Dyslexia