The Dyslexic Mindset: It's Not What You Think | Andrew Reeves | TEDxKanata

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  • Опубликовано: 4 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 67

  • @carolynsovet6153
    @carolynsovet6153 2 года назад +23

    Thank you Andrew for telling your story. I too am dyslexic and I can relate to everything you said. I tried to hide it for years. I got tears in my eyes hearing about your playing the game and having to come up with a plan to get through it. I have been there. And I agree that over the years my thinking differently has been and continues to be a gift.

    • @tjbadenllc
      @tjbadenllc Год назад +3

      Diagnosed at 60 coming out at 63 - first time I have felt like I belong after nuclear highs and lows destroying everything in my path to find a home .. truth be told

  • @lokeshgarg6691
    @lokeshgarg6691 2 года назад +21

    As a society and as an individual we have to relearn how to appreciate each individual as they are...without attaching adjectives to them

  • @rafeal-b6160
    @rafeal-b6160 Год назад +5

    I am different, no better or worse "is the best thing that I heard in a long time, thank you for reminding me of that.

  • @martingrady7654
    @martingrady7654 Год назад +13

    Im 53, I discovered this at the age of 53. My life has been struggling with the alphabet, telling the time, reading and reading aloud, etc, yet I know things I can do. I own my own business with 12 x employees, and drive a new Tesla, yet I left a UK school with not one qualification. People come to me to problem-solve, things such as engineering designs and manufacture, and I draw the plans in my head. Finding out that I am Dyslexic was a how could I not know, when I have a brother who did his Masters's Degree and a sister whos a deputy's head, yet I could not concentrate on a single paragraph of a book.
    If I did not have spell check and a wife to read forms then I would be lost, funny how I never ever read instruction manuals, yet always put things together, I can't follow a shopping list or any list such as directions. It was all clear as daylight that I like many have Dyslexia, but never new! or is that Knew :) FFS I even spelt is the wrong way around towards the end :)

    • @Skoopyghost
      @Skoopyghost Год назад +1

      Dyslexic and autistic. I can seem normal to people, but when I tell people. I'm treated differently, and I don't tell people because of it.

  • @karenmcgroarty4187
    @karenmcgroarty4187 Год назад +3

    I was recently diagnosed at the age of 57. Just finding out about support and tools

  • @lindawright5984
    @lindawright5984 2 года назад +4

    Only you will be able to tell him how wonderful his gift is.

  • @jameskonzek8892
    @jameskonzek8892 2 года назад +31

    Learning how to tell time on an old school clock was embarrassingly difficult. I knew the alphabet but I didn't know where the letters were in the alphabet. It's weird. I could go on & on.. it sucked.

    • @ButterflyLullabyLtd
      @ButterflyLullabyLtd 2 года назад +3

      It was only a problem because you were in the wrong environment. State Education does not understand Dyslexic Thinking and how amazing it is. I bet you have some amazing Gifts because of Dyslexia.

    • @stevenbuckley1416
      @stevenbuckley1416 Год назад +1

      @@ButterflyLullabyLtd I am a problem solver and see things in a logical way, that some find amaze, I’m humble but pleased at the same time that it helps someone out 😊

    • @onlyflair3
      @onlyflair3 Год назад

      i just got dyslexia readkng that

    • @grammydayao7581
      @grammydayao7581 Год назад

      ​@onlyflair3 it's reading .

    • @OFFICERMCCOMACK
      @OFFICERMCCOMACK 10 месяцев назад

      I was born in 1970. I struggled with that too. Very embarrassing 😂

  • @Mr.2shortz
    @Mr.2shortz 2 года назад +10

    100% respect

  • @Hayssss
    @Hayssss 9 месяцев назад +2

    31 here, was told i had a learning disability when i was very young. It wasn't until years after high school i found out what dyslexia is

    • @andrewreeves1324
      @andrewreeves1324 9 месяцев назад +2

      What it is? = A gift! Use it and exploit it!!!

  • @regulastolz5923
    @regulastolz5923 Год назад +1

    I'm a dyslexic , my time telling is slower also I struggle with the A,B ,C .
    But my passion is working as a care , with people. But found always people Reding through my reports.

  • @MWB_logic_reason_respect
    @MWB_logic_reason_respect Год назад +6

    In the UK it is under the Equality Act 2010 it is noted as a disabllilty. It gives some protection for us in the workplace or education, but also, wrongly states its a disability.

  • @neurodiversitystories5128
    @neurodiversitystories5128 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing your story 🙌

  • @charlottearty8157
    @charlottearty8157 Год назад +1

    I really love this speaker, reminds me of me who even experienced lots of setbacks, that i will adapt with things like affirmations i can believe in new things i can do! Even if looking back in perspective etc

  • @IrresistibleArtBySalisha
    @IrresistibleArtBySalisha Год назад +1

    So many people needed to hear this. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @louiserose2609
    @louiserose2609 2 года назад +5

    Thank you! I agree we need to rethink the housing ideas badly!

  • @ButterflyLullabyLtd
    @ButterflyLullabyLtd 2 года назад +5

    What a fantastic story and very humble. I worked for a bunch of Architects in London. Lovely people. Apparently a lot of Architects are Dyslexic which gives them the ability to visualise what others cannot see. Most certainly a Gift.
    I was taught ITA English Twaddle in school. A backward Alien Language that made no sense at all. I taught myself to type from a book, worked for my Uncles Shipping Company. And then worked my way up from Receptionist to Managing Directors Secretary for a top London Architectural firm in London. Something I am very proud of.
    When State Education failed to teach my daughter to read, write and spell I used Kindness, Art and Music to make reading fun and not stressful. She is now a Bookworm.
    I love being different. And believe we should all celebrate the things we can do and not worry about the other stuff.

    • @maurreese
      @maurreese Год назад

      Thank you for sharing this knowledge!

  • @kracyndalabombarbe2342
    @kracyndalabombarbe2342 Год назад +6

    I've recently discovered I am dyslexic at 20. After a few years of a sneaking suspicion that I was. I always loved to read and write, getting lost in those types of worlds of fantasy or learning about history or true stories of survivors or just something interesting. But reading and writing was pretty difficult. They never clicked for me till I was about 10 to 11 years old. Before then I hated it with a passion. I had to be put into classes that had to help teach me how to write and read properly. I always hated having audio read for me or other people read for me, it was too distracting and too fast. Even if I have to read things over and over till it makes sense, I still like reading for myself. But I love to draw more than I do to read.
    What made me realize I needed to get myself checked for it was when I was at work. I work in a place where there's a lot of letters and numbers mixed together and it has twisted and turned me around while working several times. One incident was embarrassing when I was looking for a product, I believe it was a series that went LE45 and I accidentally read it as LE13, and someone that was working in the same area as me had to come along and put it infront of me for me to realize it was the object I needed to complete the series of work I needed to finish.
    While in highschool I kept getting in trouble with my one English teacher cause she wanted everyone to use pens instead of pencils (she was a real piece of work that one) and I tried to explain to her that I tend to make a lot of mistakes while writing and when I go to proof read my work I like to fix them. And she also knew she already had a dyslexic person in her class as well who was my older cousin and I tended to help her the best I could even tho I got confused with words and mixing things up.
    Learning about dyslexia also made me realize how obvious the signs of me having it was as a child compared to my older siblings who don't have it. But living in the household I was at the time I understand why I wasn't brought to be checked on for it. But now, even in the workplace I am where a lot of it is a series of numbers and letters, I still need to work harder and faster then my fellow coworkers as the numbers and letters tend to get flipped or jumped for me and gets me mixed up and confused. Even when trying to find boxes I need cause they tend to put the numbers of the type of box sideways which doesn't help when trying to look for the right one, so I've learned to memorize where they are placed on the wall. Which ends up being difficult if I end up not getting that station to work at the next day.
    Sorry for the long talk right here, just sharing my recent discovery of learning about my own dyslexia in the short time I realized it's just even there. Just makes everything make so much more sense now why I had the struggles I did while growing up.

    • @andrewreeves1324
      @andrewreeves1324 Год назад

      Love it, own it and use it!!!!

    • @CleanTiger-oq2ly
      @CleanTiger-oq2ly Год назад

      bro how do you read, every time i try to read a book I get end the line and have to scan the whole page just to find the next line or i skip a line or go back up to a previous line reading with dyslexia is insane props

  • @chriscohlmeyer4735
    @chriscohlmeyer4735 5 месяцев назад +1

    When I was young I was determined to figure out this reading thing. First and second grades mostly "sight words" and simple longer words that followed a pattern of when they would be used. In third grade I found an interesting book that an older brother had for high school English, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Different words and word usage along with some additional letters, it all added up to letters in longer words being distinctive enough that I could unknowingly guess these words. I wrote a school book report using the words and word usage along with those additional letters - it went over like a lead balloon, the teacher thought that I didn't know the, they, them, there, their, they're among other words. Sent to a tutor who quickly figured out that I knew them and could make appropriate sentences for there, their, they're so she started showing me large flash cards of multi syllable words - I struggled my way through them the first time I saw the word but would answer faster the next time it came up. She added words that started with the same first syllable, once I caught on that these words were different I started guessing the word once I figured out what additional letters that I could quickly pick out of the jumble made these words different.
    The tutor identified that 1) I wanted to figure out this reading thing so, 2) read, read, read anything and everything I could get my hands on to increase my vocabulary and guess these longer words by context, 3) a subtle ask after each sentence "Does that make sense", if not then pick through the words to figure out the wrong guess - at 70 I still do this, some of my goofs are pretty funny, 4) for school keep my reading at near grade level but otherwise have fun reading and learning.
    Rainy days or friends were busy then in the basement pulling out random copies of my dad's Architectural Digest and reading them, grabbing my older brothers copies of Boys Life, the weekly town paper, the Christian Science Monitor, the Sunday edition of the New York Times, the Encyclopedia and even Dictionaries sometimes along with some of my older brothers English books. I was also pissed off at my third grade teacher for making me sit in the front of the class and slamming her yardstick on my desk whenever I stimmed (undiagnosed ASD and ADHD) so I decided to only do enough to pass each grade. Back then we could flunk a grade if we didn't meet minimum expectations.

  • @tjbadenllc
    @tjbadenllc Год назад +1

    Thank you for telling my story in your words and your industry - so freeing

  • @mitchellwarren6351
    @mitchellwarren6351 2 года назад +7

    For real paraphrasing is the only possible way to keep up in this world I was telling my gf that the reason I paraphrase so much while I read is because I can’t read fast enough or well enough or even understand what these letters in some sort of order mean to me she still doesn’t understand why I do it she’s like yo you gotta stop doing that do often. The worst part is that she’s a psych major

    • @jennibarnes140
      @jennibarnes140 2 года назад +2

      It's so frustrating and exhausting that we are always expected to do everything in the most boring ways, the same as everyone else, cos that makes it easier for them. They never consider just how much effort we put in, how hard we actually do try. 🙂

  • @marthadressel3856
    @marthadressel3856 2 месяца назад +1

    I like it ❤

  • @chrisuribe
    @chrisuribe Год назад +4

    Thank you so much! Everyone reduces dyslexia to a reading disability! it is like saying that astigmatism is a reading disability! yes, we do struggle with reading and writing, but as a consequence of the way our brains process information across the hemispheres. We excel in many other fields, especially in arts.

  • @IrresistibleArtBySalisha
    @IrresistibleArtBySalisha Год назад +2

    Why am I in tears!

    • @andrewreeves1324
      @andrewreeves1324 Год назад

      Its a rush of the past - own it and move on / exercise your gify

  • @lionoceantherapy
    @lionoceantherapy Год назад +2

    I loved hearing your story. Thank you.

  • @michaelorfanos7416
    @michaelorfanos7416 Год назад +1

    Well said.

  • @OFFICERMCCOMACK
    @OFFICERMCCOMACK 10 месяцев назад +2

    Yeah. Testing sucks so bad.

    • @andrewreeves1324
      @andrewreeves1324 9 месяцев назад

      See - they don't test your strengths - that's the problem.....So ignore it and focus on your gift that no others have and we don't need grades or % to prove a thing

  • @LisaNygard
    @LisaNygard 9 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve got dyslexic heart as well

  • @rosscomt5295
    @rosscomt5295 Год назад +3

    It's definitely not a gift. It's something that's always there and sadly you will judged by. It's something that you have constantly battle with. It does improve but takes a long time.

    • @andrewreeves1324
      @andrewreeves1324 Год назад

      It is your gift - normal? No, hard to recognize? yes, but it is! - You see things differently = that's a gift if you exercise it - nothing is easy for anyone

    • @MerrowGula
      @MerrowGula Год назад

      its definitely a gift. you just dont know how to use it yet.

    • @JO-fw4sx
      @JO-fw4sx 10 месяцев назад

      We’re told that Dyslexia is a gift. Being on the spectrum is a gift. OCD is a gift. I totally disagree that any of these are a gift. For most people it’s a life long struggle. It’s like telling someone with one leg that they have a gift, the gift of weighing less. The “gift “ is not equal to the struggle.
      It’s no gift in having to work twice as hard to get half as far in the professional world while trying to hide this “gift” to keep from losing your job, home, relationships etc.
      Yes it’s great to have a creative mind and a few other things that come with these labels, but most of us pay a price for our achievements. So I would say our achievements are earned by determination and having a work harder, not because of a “gift”.

  • @soaringeagleshomeschoolgro5025
    @soaringeagleshomeschoolgro5025 Год назад +1

    More people should realize that the dyslexic mind has a useful place in society. I teach Orton Gillingham to dyslexics on you tube because we shouldn't have to be rich to have the training we need to learn to read fluently.

  • @AnthonyWade7
    @AnthonyWade7 Год назад +3

    How many saw, TEDxKatana instead of TEDxKanata?

    • @1m4turtle61
      @1m4turtle61 10 месяцев назад

      I did. Reading things wrong can be frustating, but it can also make the world more fun

  • @lunarious87
    @lunarious87 2 года назад +4

    I may watch this later, i'm ASD

  • @michealdavies-bu4bs
    @michealdavies-bu4bs Год назад +1

    For those with dyslexia: Are you with/Did you went through an intervention programme? How long have you been/were you on the intevention programme and what is the name of it? Are you still word blind? If so to what extent you are?

  • @karmasss
    @karmasss 2 года назад +2

    amen

  • @claudeleclair3429
    @claudeleclair3429 2 года назад +1

    Seulement 1 mot "Motivant!"

  • @innovativefacultytrainingkota
    @innovativefacultytrainingkota 2 года назад +1

    Nice

  • @johndilk2966
    @johndilk2966 2 года назад +3

    I am dyslexic, I also have adhd ocd and Asperger’s. I am really finding this lecture hard to follow and I am really trying hard to Watch to the end. I am losing intrest. Sorry but I tried

  • @RahulRanjan674
    @RahulRanjan674 Месяц назад

    could anyone relate to his pronunciatioon like skipping some letters and a bit paced. i usually watch things on 1.5x but this I watched on 1x. it seemed like my speed and the pronunciation or the attempt to translate the picture in your head to words (yes we/dyslexic think in pictures)

  • @jenskruse1475
    @jenskruse1475 2 года назад +2

    It is so unintellifent to contribute his succes to having a dyslectic brain. His brain is just very good in other areas to compensate for those challanges he had.
    I have been seen ad dyslectic as young. And have never had any advantage because of it.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Год назад

      He does, but by the same token, architecture is a creative, and technical, field and standing out is critical if you want to build a firm that large. These things are rarely as simple as they might seem.

  • @reelsab8677
    @reelsab8677 2 года назад +3

    i am looking to learn spoken english😂

  • @Treestouch
    @Treestouch 2 года назад +2

    its seems like you are on the verge of crying the whole time. what's the matter.

    • @alexiaherron5716
      @alexiaherron5716 2 года назад +11

      Public speaking is very difficult. Particularly for people who are inexperienced with it, who aren't familiar with the psychological science behind speeches, and those who get intimidated in front of crowds. I guarantee it took incredible courage for him to stand up up there and continue through the speech. Especially when speaking about personal matters, it's very intimidating to share your story and ideas in front of any sized crowd. We are so used to conversation, but public speaking isn't the same. There is no dialogue, and the cues from the audience are different. I think he's just a little nervous and after a few speeches you would see him get better and better. I appreciate that he gave us his time to share his ideas. If I'd offer any feedback, it would be to review standard speech composition, where the speaker first introduces themselves, and talks about their credibility on the topic. Specify what the speech will be about so audience members know what to expect and can follow along. Repeat key ideas, and create markers along your speech that refer back to key ideas in the introduction so the audience keeps pace. This is a speech about Dyslexia, Architecture, COVID, dreams for the future? We're not sure. I can see that the speaker is sharing a story and his thoughts, but the speech has little structure and he needs to narrow his topic a bit to present a clear message that we can take away. If you're one to get nervous, practice your speech in the room you'll be giving it before the time of your speech, or at least stand on stage and inspect the area. This will make you more relaxed! Again, thank you for taking the time to share your ideas. I would love to see future speeches and how he progresses as a speaker. Great job!

    • @THATHOMIEwiththeBIGFEET
      @THATHOMIEwiththeBIGFEET 2 года назад +7

      Grown men build others up. Very odd comment.

    • @andrewreeves1324
      @andrewreeves1324 Год назад +2

      Kyle, yes, I was (on the verge of crying) - trying to explain your entire life's journey in 10min was a challenge on all levels and brought back some struggles/emotions that I didn't expect - I have never said any of this out loud to a single person other than days before = prep with my wife - BUT it reinforced (after the camera stopped) why I see it all as my / others strength - Not crying now and NOTHING is the matter!

    • @Treestouch
      @Treestouch Год назад +2

      @@andrewreeves1324 Andrew I went back to listen again keeping in mind what you have told me. This all makes perfect sense. I’m a highly sensitive person so it’s no wonder I was picking up your pain. I admire your courage and also recognize how incredibly challenging it is to stay on track and get points across. My mind jumps all over and so I know how hard this must have been. Thank you sincerely for explaining, and I admire your abilities and willingness to grow and heal. It’s the most admirable trait. With Love, Kyle

  • @maurreese
    @maurreese Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing your story!!