My dyslexic son, who struggled in school, is a TWO TIME EMMY AWARD winning news producer! When he was growing up, we never called it a learning disability. We called it a learning DIFFERENCE. He is brilliant, kind, empathetic, and extremely successful. Dyslexia can be a gift. 💗
My husband is a retired special ed. teacher. He always told the dyslexic kids to hang on, life will be easier after you’re out of school. I always thought Stephanie was wonderful, now she’s Superwoman!
Ms. Ruhle Thank You for your insight. I to have dyslexia. Being much older than you by a few decades I didn't find out I had dyslexia until I was in my 20"s. Schools just didn't know about it in the 50's or at least my school system didn't. But I developed personal systems to help me learn. Much like you notes I did something similar. Over my life I went on to get 21/2 Masters and a Doctorate. So we can learn, we just have to do it our way. It may not be easy but proving to myself that I was not the slow, lazy, or dumb person my early teachers told my parents I was made the motivation to do better. Thank you you are beautiful person. May you and your children enjoy a life of success one note or outline at a time. Peace Thom
Since I was a pre teen, ai couldn’t get through the first paragraph of any textbook. I’m 77 now, successfully retired after a forty year working career with 2 college degrees, and you finally diagnosed my problem. Thank you Stephanie !
How did you do it ? I have a nephew who I believe has dyslexia also. What workarounds did you do to be able to become successful in school and your career?
What a brilliant lady. Stephanie, you are a treasure. Thank you for sharing and giving millions of similar affected people hope. Cheers from Michael. Australia.
Been through this with my son and yes, ADHD/dyslexic folk have very special talents. Steph is right - these folk think differently in a non-linear way and are frequently successful like Stephanie. Check out how many entrepreneurs have this talent.
Thank you! I'm 73 years old. Fought through school in 50s & 60s with undiagnosed dyslexia. Inner city schools answer was reform school.Someone pleaded my case. My IQ score came back as 138. Eligible for Mensa, to my brother's chagrin, With all the failures in my face, sustance abuse was an 'out'. Oddly, a particular year at summer school proved life saving, Talk to me.
My Dad’s 82, and a working carpenter. In his case it’s measure 4 times cut once. When he was in school in England in the 40s and 50s, dyslexia wasn’t well understood and he went undiagnosed for a large part of his life. Long a regular reader at his church and still an in-demand woodworker, I couldn’t be more proud of him.
Thank you for sharing your story, my two children have dyslexia and it's definitely hard to navigate at times. the emotional aspect of this with feelings of self doubt, of "acting out" - plus the bartering with teachers to catch up really resonated. Love to see more stories on this!
Wow! MSNBC please explore this more. People need the best places for resources, support and plans to find what work for their situations. Ms Ruhle it’s book writing time!
I once volunteered at a local school with the SMART program (Start Making A Reader Today). The first boy I had was dyslexic and struggling. He hated reading. I showed him if we covered up the lines of text we weren't reading it was easier to focus on just a few words at a time. I did the same with longer words, pointing out that it's often two words we know combined or syllables. The boy went from hating being there and not wanting to interact to a kid picking out books and sitting smiling and ready when I arrived. Unfortunately, a big part of the problem was that the family moved often to find work, so the boy had no consistent advocate.
Thanks Stephanie for telling your story, I think it will help a lot of students and others realize that they can achieve despite any hurdles life put in their way.
The , sadly, most common misconception about dyslexia is that it’s a sign of lack of intelligence. It’s far from it. It just means you have to learn things in a different way and how Stephanie describe her way of inventing ways that work for her is very intelligent indeed
Thank you so much for that segment. Best of luck to Stephanie & her son. To those who have kids who need support and are in public school, find out if your school has an Individualized Education Program (IEP). They will evaluate your child and develop an IEP plan providing support & accommodations for their needs.
I am a dyslexic who did learn to read - I'm slow at it and it requires concentration. I also earned a BS and Masters because I did not know until grad school that I am dyslexic - I expected myself to find a way to navigate what I thought of as my unique learning style and so I did. Never give up on yourself.
I love Stephanie. It’s funny that she’s also a dyslexic, like my husband who was the poster child in the 60’s and 70’s when his pioneering mom, Dorothy Crawford, started the ACLD ( Assoc. for Children with Learning Disabilities) with the DOJ. She got grants and opened up schools and helped soplé see the genius in the compensation factor that leads so many Dyslexics to greatness. Stay awesome, Stephanie. PS Get Ron Insana back on your show. I can really learn when he speaks. Jennifer Harris
Wow wow! Amazing story thank you so much for sharing and opening our eyes to it so wonderfully! I also have dyslexia and can totally relate to this story you explain dyslexia so perfectly. To all of those having doubts Please believe in your self because it is possible and it does get better! Its all about finding the right kind of supports. Not just support. You can do it and there are recourses available!!! Take care of yourselves.
Got to admit, I wasn't a Stephanie fan before seeing this segment....like her a whole lot more for her honesty and courage. Dyslexia is difficult, but she's conquered it! you go Stephanie!
Thank you Stephanie for your story. You brought tears to my eyes. Please write a book on your strategy that is working for you and your son. I think of so many young children and adults who struggle with dyslexia and don't even know they have it. Bless you.
As a fiercely articulate 76 year old Dyslexia curious learner, I have discovered there are 2 thing about me I would like to share. 1. there things I am good at 2. and things that are hard. If I calm down find the resources I need the hard things can get done.
I always struggled with reading, otherwise I wasn't that bad with my ADHD. I have to break everything down and have to understand everything and every word of what I say. When I was diagnosed the Teachers and Doctors were enthralled with how I could be an A+ student and yet be a so highly dyslexic. 45 and still can't make it through a novel...
Hi! I understand! I was born half dyslexia! They didn't understand about it when I was in school! They would put me in the back of the classroom. My mom helped me overcome it. I sometimes don't see things the same way. My message Mom was the Best teacher and friend. God bless her.
There’s something about your personality Stephanie that I always connected with my name is greg bennett I live in Peoria Heights Illinois years ago. I asked the great spirit as I call it to help me find something that fits me. Started working for a tree service. I have my own business now for 30 years everything up there makes sense. I tell people that I’m one of three of the best guys in the area these two guys I respect very much a great spirit has blessed me. I’m very touched by your story. I feel very blessed in my life is I know you do thank you. Take care.
Many people also don't know it, but Stephen Cannell, TV write-producer of Wiseguy and a host of others was dyslexic and 'went through his schooling and part of his career undiagnosed'. His company was a mini-major producer in the 80s, great people to work with. Remember him well.
I'm 80 years old and dyslexi. Remember when I was like 10 years old. It's late. He took a little card and got a hole in it. So I only bread one word at a time and in my dyslexia I could read
Wow I’m dyslexic too. My education was difficult because I would fail tests and the only thing I could do was practice things until I was unthinkably perfect at a skill. Now I’m a pretty good Carpenter / Restoration Specialist
@richardfox9130 Yyyep child abuse and I didn’t remember it until last year and I can’t believe how much self love I have go do now and go back and get that little girl and give her a voice and tell her I’m going to intercede and love her right!
I have used a book called The Synonym Finder by J.I. Rodale since 1966. I t is updated periodically.. I tell my fellow human beings, "You do not have to know one million words....You just have to know (and use) the ONE book that has over ONE million words . " It is under $20.00. You will use it the rest of your life.
I'm dyslexic myself and have been working in my local public library for 30 years now. When I got tested at 45 the expert told me that I was the worst case that she knew about working at my level. Only after getting to know me one can truly appreciate the hard larbour
Thank you Stephanie. I went through HS and University undiagnosed with dyslexia. Only by my sheer fortitude (stubbiness) was I successful. Even now when I hit spell check on my pc the lights dim. lol
As a 38 year teacher, the kids noticed I used different hands to write( right at board, left at desk) going left when told right, flipping numbers in dates -as a student back then it was simple “figure it out” that was my help. I believe I did well as a teacher it can be beaten.
I'm 64 years old and Dyslexic. I hate reading. It has always been an issue for me. It all started in 1966 when I was in a car accident were I had bad head trauma. It SUCKS
I'm with you. Voted most likely to succeed in school but I had to remember what was said in class because I could read a sentence on paper and not comprehend what I read. Try that when you're an actor, years later. They diagnosed it as ADHD but Dyslexia was probably a closer match. Good for you. There is a lot of us out there I suspect. Shame you're not on the A.M. Today show much anymore. I think people miss you.
we all are dyslexic, have adhd and cannot read a history books, but try David Copperfirld, or any of the classics- try being ASD- runs in my family- now that is the challenging one
Dyslexia isn't a bad thing, just a mental landscape reality that only takes common sense and courage to deal with. Rule one, put focus and energy on what comes easily, not what is difficult. Dyslexics often master things easily that non-dyslexics find difficult. Never demand that a dyslexic subscribe to a non-dyslexic routine approach to learning. That only starts trouble. Dyslexia has its own MOJO and tool kit for life - Don’t drop the ball on Love. Then it all works out.
So disappointed in this interview. Waited all week to make sure I did not miss it. Nothing was said about early intervention and all the programs that are out there to help kids learn strategies to learn to read with dyslexia. This was just about her and how hard school is and how you will be the troublemaker in the class and you will hate school. Anyone with dyslexia or in my case has a grandson with dyslexia in first grade can get very discouraged by this interview. There are programs that will help your child learn ways to help them with everything dyslexia brings. Early intervention is key. Push to have your child tested, don’t wait!!!!! Give them the opportunity to learn at their learning style.
Completely agree! We have been trying to get students in early into our programs, the earlier the intervention the less they struggle later on. I was diagnosed at age 6 and received help immediately, when I took the ACT in high school my Reading/Writing was my best score.
Yes the interview was about Stephanie and HER personal journey as an adult diagnosed with dyslexia. What’s wrong with that? Not everything needs to be about children just because you have children.
@@curtbergeron703 if they get early intervention then they won't have to struggle as much as those that don't get intervention until later. I got help early and most people don't believe I even have dyslexia, my husband didn't get help until he was 27 years old and EVERY DAY is a struggle. He struggles daily with reading writing, and communicating. If he got early intervention he would struggle less. Nothing is wrong with her sharing her personal story but it would have been nice for her to mention how important early intervention is. A lot of parents miss the early signs. I DO NOT HAVE children yet but I still care about OTHER children. What's wrong with that?
That's interesting; although clearly Stephanie is intellegent, I have been very confused a number of times over the years when she has not known how to pronounce something, or not known a common thing.
School. It not easy on ANYone. But. The way it reward people, it a joke. Cuz. You can be dyslexic. You can be too dumb. You can be too smart. You subject to the judgement of a teacher. Plus. You have a math teacher, who have kids, she just might not like how they match up with you and teachers, when they target a kid, they always think they can end their streak, cuz they think they know 'the game' better. All it take is one kid to do well, with ADHD or dylexia, like Stephanie, put things back into place and back into perspective. Nowaday, if you fall into the teacher favorability 'niche,' you actually not liked for it. And it how it should be.
Hey, I appreciate that trolls are gonna troll, but if you really want to trigger people and get some responses to address your insecurities, you need to raise your game.
My dyslexic son, who struggled in school, is a TWO TIME EMMY AWARD winning news producer! When he was growing up, we never called it a learning disability. We called it a learning DIFFERENCE. He is brilliant, kind, empathetic, and extremely successful. Dyslexia can be a gift. 💗
I am 68 and I can't believe how on the spot this is. Thank you.
I like to read but can't always understand novels
I can read but have no idea what I am reading.@@suzanne296
My husband is a retired special ed. teacher. He always told the dyslexic kids to hang on, life will be easier after you’re out of school. I always thought Stephanie was wonderful, now she’s Superwoman!
Thank you for sharing your story. Two of my children are dyslexic and I’ve struggled to get my youngest the support she needs x
Ms. Ruhle Thank You for your insight. I to have dyslexia. Being much older than you by a few decades I didn't find out I had dyslexia until I was in my 20"s. Schools just didn't know about it in the 50's or at least my school system didn't. But I developed personal systems to help me learn. Much like you notes I did something similar. Over my life I went on to get 21/2 Masters and a Doctorate. So we can learn, we just have to do it our way. It may not be easy but proving to myself that I was not the slow, lazy, or dumb person my early teachers told my parents I was made the motivation to do better.
Thank you you are beautiful person.
May you and your children enjoy a life of success one note or outline at a time.
Peace
Thom
Since I was a pre teen, ai couldn’t get through the first paragraph of any textbook. I’m 77 now, successfully retired after a forty year working career with 2 college degrees, and you finally diagnosed my problem. Thank you Stephanie !
How did you do it ? I have a nephew who I believe has dyslexia also. What workarounds did you do to be able to become successful in school and your career?
What a brilliant lady. Stephanie, you are a treasure. Thank you for sharing and giving millions of similar affected people hope. Cheers from Michael. Australia.
Been through this with my son and yes, ADHD/dyslexic folk have very special talents.
Steph is right - these folk think differently in a non-linear way and are frequently successful like Stephanie. Check out how many entrepreneurs have this talent.
Many of them are great mechanics and are excellent at building and "fixing" things. Great repairman and craftsman.
Thank you! I'm 73 years old. Fought through school in 50s & 60s with undiagnosed dyslexia. Inner city schools answer was reform school.Someone pleaded my case. My IQ score came back as 138. Eligible for Mensa, to my brother's chagrin, With all the failures in my face, sustance abuse was an 'out'. Oddly, a particular year at summer school proved life saving,
Talk to me.
Dyslexia, ADHD & Menopause - it’s horrible but one day there will be a company who ONLY hire people with our amazing brains!
My Dad’s 82, and a working carpenter. In his case it’s measure 4 times cut once. When he was in school in England in the 40s and 50s, dyslexia wasn’t well understood and he went undiagnosed for a large part of his life. Long a regular reader at his church and still an in-demand woodworker, I couldn’t be more proud of him.
Nice to know, I’m not alone in the world, and someone so successful with the same issue that I have has been able to deal with it… Good for her
Wonderful discussion Stephanie
Keep on keeping on Stephanie!!!💙
Thank you for sharing your story, my two children have dyslexia and it's definitely hard to navigate at times. the emotional aspect of this with feelings of self doubt, of "acting out" - plus the bartering with teachers to catch up really resonated. Love to see more stories on this!
Love you Steph, you’re so real and fun and God bless you!!! 🌹💕
Atta girl Steph !!
Love your work!!
Awesome interview! Stephanie Ruhle is brave
Wow! MSNBC please explore this more. People need the best places for resources, support and plans to find what work for their situations. Ms Ruhle it’s book writing time!
I once volunteered at a local school with the SMART program (Start Making A Reader Today). The first boy I had was dyslexic and struggling. He hated reading. I showed him if we covered up the lines of text we weren't reading it was easier to focus on just a few words at a time. I did the same with longer words, pointing out that it's often two words we know combined or syllables. The boy went from hating being there and not wanting to interact to a kid picking out books and sitting smiling and ready when I arrived. Unfortunately, a big part of the problem was that the family moved often to find work, so the boy had no consistent advocate.
Oh my God. I could totally relate to this through my all of my years in school. What a struggle!! Now I'm just old and don't mind.
Thanks Steph!
🥰♥♥♥ I love Stephanie Ruhle! Me too!
I love Stephanie.
I thought I couldn’t love this woman more 💕💜💕💜
Way to go Stephanie!
Thanks Stephanie for telling your story, I think it will help a lot of students and others realize that they can achieve despite any hurdles life put in their way.
Thank you for sharing your story. I hear your struggles and I see similar issues in my self.
The , sadly, most common misconception about dyslexia is that it’s a sign of lack of intelligence. It’s far from it. It just means you have to learn things in a different way and how Stephanie describe her way of inventing ways that work for her is very intelligent indeed
Thanks for sharing. You made it look easy. Admiration for you.
Thank you so much for that segment. Best of luck to Stephanie & her son. To those who have kids who need support and are in public school, find out if your school has an Individualized Education Program (IEP). They will evaluate your child and develop an IEP plan providing support & accommodations for their needs.
Me too. I always say
"Toin coss" instead of
"Coin toss". Mild compared to some.
Love the positivity😇
I am a dyslexic who did learn to read - I'm slow at it and it requires concentration. I also earned a BS and Masters because I did not know until grad school that I am dyslexic - I expected myself to find a way to navigate what I thought of as my unique learning style and so I did. Never give up on yourself.
I love Stephanie. It’s funny that she’s also a dyslexic, like my husband who was the poster child in the 60’s and 70’s when his pioneering mom, Dorothy Crawford, started the ACLD ( Assoc. for Children with Learning Disabilities) with the DOJ. She got grants and opened up schools and helped soplé see the genius in the compensation factor that leads so many Dyslexics to greatness.
Stay awesome, Stephanie.
PS
Get Ron Insana back on your show. I can really learn when he speaks.
Jennifer Harris
YAY! Steph! Love Stephanie Ruhle.
Powerful!
Great piece ladies! Thank you for this story; yes, it’s about intelligence!
What a wonderful segment. Stephanie is a gift.
Wow wow! Amazing story thank you so much for sharing and opening our eyes to it so wonderfully!
I also have dyslexia and can totally relate to this story you explain dyslexia so perfectly.
To all of those having doubts Please believe in your self because it is possible and it does get better! Its all about finding the right kind of supports. Not just support. You can do it and there are recourses available!!! Take care of yourselves.
What an inspirational story of overcoming potential limitations😊
I love love love love love Stephanie!
Never knew. Still an extremely beautiful and intellectual woman.❤
Got to admit, I wasn't a Stephanie fan before seeing this segment....like her a whole lot more for her honesty and courage. Dyslexia is difficult, but she's conquered it! you go Stephanie!
Thank you Stephanie for your story. You brought tears to my eyes. Please write a book on your strategy that is working for you and your son. I think of so many young children and adults who struggle with dyslexia and don't even know they have it. Bless you.
maybe a netflix special instead of a book?
So great❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
As a fiercely articulate 76 year old Dyslexia curious learner, I have discovered there are 2 thing about me I would like to share. 1. there things I am good at 2. and things that are hard. If I calm down find the resources I need the hard things can get done.
I always struggled with reading, otherwise I wasn't that bad with my ADHD.
I have to break everything down and have to understand everything and every word of what I say.
When I was diagnosed the Teachers and Doctors were enthralled with how I could be an A+ student and yet be a so highly dyslexic. 45 and still can't make it through a novel...
Admire Steph more! Kudos!
President Stephanie 😊
You’re awesome lady
Hi! I understand! I was born half dyslexia! They didn't understand about it when I was in school! They would put me in the back of the classroom. My mom helped me overcome it. I sometimes don't see things the same way. My message Mom was the Best teacher and friend. God bless her.
I’ve always liked her but with this news she’s phenomenal.
There’s something about your personality Stephanie that I always connected with my name is greg bennett I live in Peoria Heights Illinois years ago. I asked the great spirit as I call it to help me find something that fits me. Started working for a tree service. I have my own business now for 30 years everything up there makes sense. I tell people that I’m one of three of the best guys in the area these two guys I respect very much a great spirit has blessed me. I’m very touched by your story. I feel very blessed in my life is I know you do thank you. Take care.
I love Stephanie ❤
Stephanie, I love you even more now!!
Many people also don't know it, but Stephen Cannell, TV write-producer of Wiseguy and a host of others was dyslexic and 'went through his schooling and part of his career undiagnosed'. His company was a mini-major producer in the 80s, great people to work with. Remember him well.
Her show is the only news show I watch. Please hire more Dyslexics. 😇
Love her! 👍🏾
Stephanie is adorable, a little powder keg of energy!!! TNT
I'm 80 years old and dyslexi. Remember when I was like 10 years old. It's late. He took a little card and got a hole in it. So I only bread one word at a time and in my dyslexia I could read
Wow I’m dyslexic too. My education was difficult because I would fail tests and the only thing I could do was practice things until I was unthinkably perfect at a skill. Now I’m a pretty good Carpenter / Restoration Specialist
love Stephanie
They never tested for deslexia when i was in school. They labeled you stupid and paddled you
for eaverything.
Yup
😞
@richardfox9130 samzies :(
@@TheStorytellerProjects Did they paddle you eavery chance they got.c
@richardfox9130 Yyyep child abuse and I didn’t remember it until last year and I can’t believe how much self love I have go do now and go back and get that little girl and give her a voice and tell her I’m going to intercede and love her right!
I have used a book called The Synonym Finder by J.I. Rodale since 1966. I t is updated periodically.. I tell my fellow human beings, "You do not have to know one million words....You just have to know (and use) the ONE book that has over ONE million words . " It is under $20.00. You will use it the rest of your life.
I'm dyslexic myself and have been working in my local public library for 30 years now. When I got tested at 45 the expert told me that I was the worst case that she knew about working at my level. Only after getting to know me one can truly appreciate the hard larbour
Thank you Stephanie. I went through HS and University undiagnosed with dyslexia. Only by my sheer fortitude (stubbiness) was I successful. Even now when I hit spell check on my pc the lights dim. lol
As a 38 year teacher, the kids noticed I used different hands to write( right at board, left at desk) going left when told right, flipping numbers in dates -as a student back then it was simple “figure it out” that was my help. I believe I did well as a teacher it can be beaten.
Yeah I know what she means. I too have Dyslexia and Asperger syndrome and yes school was struggle for me as well.
I'm 64 years old and Dyslexic. I hate reading. It has always been an issue for me. It all started in 1966 when I was in a car accident were I had bad head trauma. It SUCKS
I love thsi!
great to help us (dyslecticy) ❤😊
I'm with you. Voted most likely to succeed in school but I had to remember what was said in class because I could read a sentence on paper and not comprehend what I read. Try that when you're an actor, years later. They diagnosed it as ADHD but Dyslexia was probably a closer match. Good for you. There is a lot of us out there I suspect. Shame you're not on the A.M. Today show much anymore. I think people miss you.
I have heavy dyslexya symptoms , this is not only in reading , this is in every math equations, physics formulas etc ...
we all are dyslexic, have adhd and cannot read a history books, but try David Copperfirld, or any of the classics- try being ASD- runs in my family- now that is the challenging one
Your rock ❤🤘
Dyslexia isn't a bad thing, just a mental landscape reality that only takes common sense and courage to deal with. Rule one, put focus and energy on what comes easily, not what is difficult. Dyslexics often master things easily that non-dyslexics find difficult. Never demand that a dyslexic subscribe to a non-dyslexic routine approach to learning. That only starts trouble. Dyslexia has its own MOJO and tool kit for life - Don’t drop the ball on Love. Then it all works out.
Sounds like she has ADHD too. I grew up with dyslexia and ADHD.
I am dyslexic and I never cheated in school.
I'm dyslexic and I have!
Stephanie's better suited for morning/daytime since she's too caffeinated for late night.
So disappointed in this interview. Waited all week to make sure I did not miss it. Nothing was said about early intervention and all the programs that are out there to help kids learn strategies to learn to read with dyslexia. This was just about her and how hard school is and how you will be the troublemaker in the class and you will hate school. Anyone with dyslexia or in my case has a grandson with dyslexia in first grade can get very discouraged by this interview. There are programs that will help your child learn ways to help them with everything dyslexia brings. Early intervention is key. Push to have your child tested, don’t wait!!!!! Give them the opportunity to learn at their learning style.
Completely agree! We have been trying to get students in early into our programs, the earlier the intervention the less they struggle later on. I was diagnosed at age 6 and received help immediately, when I took the ACT in high school my Reading/Writing was my best score.
I too was extremely disappointed
I totally agree with you. Today there is so much more out there than in the past. Early intervention is the key and supportive teachers, parents.
Yes the interview was about Stephanie and HER personal journey as an adult diagnosed with dyslexia. What’s wrong with that? Not everything needs to be about children just because you have children.
@@curtbergeron703 if they get early intervention then they won't have to struggle as much as those that don't get intervention until later. I got help early and most people don't believe I even have dyslexia, my husband didn't get help until he was 27 years old and EVERY DAY is a struggle. He struggles daily with reading writing, and communicating. If he got early intervention he would struggle less.
Nothing is wrong with her sharing her personal story but it would have been nice for her to mention how important early intervention is. A lot of parents miss the early signs.
I DO NOT HAVE children yet but I still care about OTHER children. What's wrong with that?
I have an unreasonable crush on Stephanie. :)
Stpnehie is a FILM.
I get it ( I learn fine ) I just don’t learn the way you teach...... Now... do u get it ...
That's interesting; although clearly Stephanie is intellegent, I have been very confused a number of times over the years when she has not known how to pronounce something, or not known a common thing.
👍
Would have helped 65 years ago
Trump also suffers from dyslexia among other things.
Agreed.
And diaper rash😂
I believe that that's part of Trump's problem.
A lot to admire about her….but not a news person. The amount of pressured speech, use of emotional language and volume gives me an immediate headache.
She struggles with fixing her hair also!
School. It not easy on ANYone. But. The way it reward people, it a joke. Cuz. You can be dyslexic. You can be too dumb. You can be too smart. You subject to the judgement of a teacher. Plus. You have a math teacher, who have kids, she just might not like how they match up with you and teachers, when they target a kid, they always think they can end their streak, cuz they think they know 'the game' better. All it take is one kid to do well, with ADHD or dylexia, like Stephanie, put things back into place and back into perspective. Nowaday, if you fall into the teacher favorability 'niche,' you actually not liked for it. And it how it should be.
What a rotten name to give someone who's dyslexic 😂
Her actual surname is Hurley. So sad.
I’m not dyslexic and I hated school too. Dyslexic people do not have ownership of that.
Dyslexic. But dresses well!
No wonder her show has such low ratings? What a shame. Smh
Actually, her ratings are pretty decent for an 11 pm political cable show.
She rocks and truth matters.
@@lorettanericcio-bohlman567 Biased Truth?
Hey, I appreciate that trolls are gonna troll, but if you really want to trigger people and get some responses to address your insecurities, you need to raise your game.
@@philby27 I got your Goat didn't I Simpleton? 😆 Fa sho!
I'm a Democrat now voting for President TRUMP 2024.....just saying
Do you want a cookie?
As my mom would say, don’t be foolish, u know better than that.
Thanks for sharing.... was it childhood abuse or neglect? Just asking.
Wow, I never would have guessed, she does a great job on MSNBC. Thank you 🙏
She has that? That explains a lot!!
Ah yes a bright girl as a newsperson. This endears me more to her. Hang in there, you're a doll Honey
Stephanie the joke