Ever wondered what it’s like having dyslexia? This site will help you see. And this gif shows you at a glance what it’s like.
The person’s blog has been setup for letters to “jump around” like what sufferer’s see. If you find it hard to read, imagine what the sufferer’s have to cope with on a daily basis. Sure, you can probably adapt to it after a period – like reading mirror letters or reading another language. Heck, you could probably read Al Bhed fluently, given enough time. But unlike dyslexia, all the other languages are static – they don’t change constantly.
I used to wonder why dyslexic people had an extra 30 minutes in exams when I was at school. Seeing this helps me understand why. Just being told “the letters jump around” didn’t really help me grasp the size of the task sufferer’s had to put up with.
I had dyslexic school mates and they were often shunned because they were considered “slow” readers. Unfortunately, this mindset carried on throughout our school life, and although they were slower at reading they were amazing at absorbing the information they read, doing really well at their exams (with the extra 30 minutes of course). That itself silenced their bullies.
Source: This is what reading is like if you have dyslexia – CNN.com
I applaud people who struggle and overcome this. I got half way through the post and said eff it. I doubt I would be a reader if that is the way the world of words looked to me.
You mean half way through the “jumping around” post? Yeah, it is really hard to read. But whereas we have a choice to stop reading and move onto text that is not jumping around dyslexia sufferers don’t have a choice…