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This is a tale of an adult with nonverbal LD,
and how I've put my strengths to use in compensating for my
weaknesses.
When I was three years old, I learned the alphabet. My mother
taught me the ABCs herself. However, I learned my letters via an
unorthodox way. I learned the letters "N-Z" first, then
I learned the letters "A-N." At that point, I put them
all together.
From my earliest years, reading was an integral part of my life.
My mother and my older sisters all loved to read. My mother not
only taught me the alphabet at an early age, she saw to it that I
was supplied with books. She purchased picture books for me and
checked them out of the library as well. And she read to me
regularly. Night after night, I would take stacks of storybooks to
her, and while I sat in her lap, she would read them to me. As a
result, I learned to read at the age of five.
In a way, it's paradoxical that I learned to read so early,
because unlike the speech skills of most children with nonverbal
learning disabilities, mine were delayed. (Normally, kids with NLD
learn to speak and to read at precociously early ages, after which
they rapidly develop unusually advanced vocabularies.) I spoke
words at two years of age, then I was three or four years old
before I spoke my first sentence, and I still used baby talk when
I was five. In first grade, I still couldn't pronounce the blend
"th." Instead, I pronounced it as "f."
(Because I was so late in learning to talk, I was once mis-diagnosed
as retarded. When I was five or six years old, a psychologist,
while testing me, asked me to tell him what a stove was. Because I
lacked the speech skills to define a stove, I drew him a picture
of one. He recommended that I attend a school for mentally
retarded children. I did--for one day.)
Once I learned to speak, however, I became a chatty, talkative
child by nature. In fact, one of the things others would complain
of was, "You talk too much!"
At some point during my early childhood years, I discovered the
joys of creative writing. I can still remember the first story I
ever wrote, though I can no longer recite it by heart. It was a
short, heavily-illustrated tale about a ghost.
From that time on, I wrote incessantly. I wrote story after story
after story. Whenever I didn't know the spelling of a word, I
would ask my mother to supply it. As a result, as is typical for a
child with a nonverbal learning disability, my spelling and
grammar skills rapidly advanced. Needless to say, from the
beginning, my family encouraged my creative writing. (Curiously,
in spite of all my years of writing practice, my writing skills
never really matured. Even today, my handwriting resembles that of
a child. On the plus side, though, it was never the laborious
struggle for me it is for many dyslexic and NLD children. I've
always been able to produce legible writing without effort.)
Throughout my growing-up years, I wrote stories simply because I
enjoyed doing so. It was--and is--something that gave me a source
of badly-needed self-esteem. Because of my nonverbal LD, I was a
poor athlete, and my social skills were even poorer. I was never
good at math, though I could generally manage basic arithmetic
calculations without undue difficulty. (Even today, my mental-math
skills are practically nonexistent, and math that requires
mathematical reasoning, such as algebra and geometry, is quite
hard for me.) My chances of competing and winning on the
playground were, alas, virtually nil. But in my language arts
skills, I could compete with the best of them. Reading, grammar
and punctuation, vocabulary, spelling, rote memorization, etc.
were areas I knew I could do well in. So was creative writing.
My love of reading and writing enriched my life in so many ways.
Through books, I learned so much about the world, about life, and
got to escape the real world's trials and tribulations. It would
be impossible to list all the books I've read through the
years--there have simply been too many. But every one has added to
my life in some way. And writing has given me a marvelous creative
outlet as well as developing my language-arts abilities. That, in
turn, has played a vital part in helping me to overcome the
weaknesses caused by my NLD, and nowadays, it plays an even
greater role.
As an adult, I've acquired formal training in creative writing.
During the 1990s, I studied with two correspondence schools:
WRITER'S DIGEST SCHOOL and THE INSTITUTE OF CHILDREN'S LITERATURE.
Thanks to them, I've been able to achieve a professional level in
my fiction writing that I hope will lead to publication. In
addition, I took journalism courses at a state university.
The skills I acquired at that university are helping me greatly
now. Today, at 39 years of age, I use my writing skills to make
some money. Since November, 1998, I've worked as a part-time
corresponding reporter (otherwise known as a "stringer")
for a small-town newspaper. I cover school board meetings and
special events, and I write human-interest feature stories. So, in
spite of my NLD, I am able to not only make some spending money,
but I am also gaining valuable experience I hope will get me a
steady job in the future.
I've also put my love of reading to use, financially. Last fall,
the local elementary school hired me to read the books it
collected for a reading program, and to write a quiz for each one;
I spent the rest of the school year doing just that. In addition,
last spring, I copyedited some papers a friend of mine had
written, for which she paid me. So I've been getting much-needed
opportunities to use my strengths and interests to gain job
experience and to make some money.
In addition, the Internet offers me a way to keep my hand in,
regarding fiction-writing. I have written 24 fanfiction stories
which are posted on the following URL: http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Cinema/5360/kgstories.html.
(Owing to copyright restrictions, I can never make any money off
them, but they're a great way to gain exposure!) One of my dreams
is to become a children's book author.
The advice I have for other NLD adults is this: in addition to
remediating your weaknesses, find out what you're good at and zero
in on your strengths and aptitudes. Because it is through using
them that you have the best chance of achieving success in the
world.
http://community-1.webtv.net/kgreen20/KATHYSPAGE
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