Quote:
Originally Posted by Blossom
I hate to say this but you sound like my husband he too doesn't understand how different a dyslexic brain works. Get him some audiobooks with good voice acting to start with. See if he can find a genre he enjoys. Reading should never be pushed on someone as a task. If they don't enjoy it then they aren't going to want to read. Once he finds an author to enjoy he may want to read the print version to comprehend better or he may not.
It actually hurts I'm talking headaches to eyestrain to just your head feeling funny to relearn grammar and spelling for a dyslexic. It takes time and effort so you need to realize that he will never use his brain like you do. He will never think the same way you do. Our brains are wired differently.
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I imagine that same problem affects anyone who doesn't suffer from a given problem. The person who doesn't have problem x may study it but even the most careful study of a problem isn't quite the same as having it. Certainly that is the case with Diabetes. Anyone can read about low blood sugar etc. but if you don't have to live with it day in and day out you can't really understand it like an actual diabetic does. I know I can understand that letters are switched around or backwards for a person who is dyslexic but I can't understand the problem like someone who has it does.