Joined: 25 Oct 2008 Age: 62 Gender: Female Posts: 3,154
07 Feb 2010, 4:17 am
I write fluent mirror writing with letters and words reversed (from right to left of page.)
I can also write fluent mirror writing and also upside down at the same time - something I only became aware of when someone on WP suggest I try it last year.
I have whole journals written in mirror writing. It looks beautiful. pages and pages of script.
Joined: 5 Feb 2010 Age: 40 Gender: Female Posts: 78
07 Feb 2010, 2:51 pm
Sometimes when I am reading I completely skip words or sentences, or I will look at them and get the words jumbled. I get numbers jumbled around a lot. A professor of mine said sometimes when he reads he reads straight down and not from left to right, I wanted tell him I do that too sometimes but couldn't form the words.
Besides reading, I do things in general backwards. If I am getting in a car and my hands are full, instead of putting the stuff in first, I'll get in with all of it in my hands and then have to get back out to place it because I didn't think about it first. Common sense things sometimes just don't occur to me and I feel incredibly dumb for it, specially when I am with people and they make fun of me for it or ask me why I did something the way I did it.
I've done this for as long as I could remember. I didn't know it it was a mechanics thing (easier to turn the page that way) or something else. I'm glad there are others that do the same. I well read and see what's what.
Joined: 21 Dec 2009 Age: 56 Gender: Male Posts: 1,015
11 May 2010, 3:32 am
I only have read one book backwards and that is Cold Mountain because he goes into so much minutely specific detail about the way people lived back then that the plot is always a distraction when I read it so I didn't want to miss that much. I haven't ever read a book so concerned with historical objects and methods/customs but if anyone knows of any please suggest them, it is fascinating. Most books are concerned with plot and even scenery is a distant second place.
When I was alot younger and read voraciously (the internet has pretty much taken over my reading and I rarely read fiction anymore) I would always read the ending of a book first before I embarked on it. I just wanted to know what I was getting myself into. It helped me relax and not be so anxious and in a hurry to get to the end of the book.
Joined: 11 Apr 2010 Age: 33 Gender: Female Posts: 471 Location: United States
11 May 2010, 7:05 am
This is a dyslexia thing, so I never have because I don't have dyslexia, but I know plenty of people who do.
I can't read magazines or articles backward...it drives me crazy! Even if there's no "plot" I still feel like I'm spoiling the story somehow by starting at the end hahaha.
Joined: 21 Jan 2010 Age: 36 Gender: Female Posts: 59
11 May 2010, 11:16 pm
I often read the replies to threads backwards. And sometimes I read articles backwards, but I think that's more so if I'm scanning for a particular piece of information.
Why are you reading backwards? Is it that you enjoy thinking about different ways to get to the same solution?
If you look up divergent thought, you'll find it described as an alternate almost backward, way of thinking (not backward as in ignorant or out of date, reversed thought patterns). A divergent thinker wants to read the end of the book and imagine all the routes the author might have taken to get to that conclusion while reading to see which choices the author actually made. This is a right brained way of thinking, but doesn't necessarily mean that you'd be left handed.
My middle son is left handed and is most definitely not divergent. He's a start to finish kind of guy who colors between the lines. He's very smart, with a genius level IQ. He's extremely left handed and can't do things very well with his right.
My youngest son could be the most divergent thinker alive on the planet today. He didn't speak until he was 5 but tests as not being in the spectrum. His test scores support extreme divergency, and he sure is one creative unusual little dude. He's as right handed as they come.
Maybe you're not divergent and just have a unique quirk that's all your own.
Joined: 7 Dec 2008 Age: 47 Gender: Female Posts: 27,019
12 May 2010, 11:07 pm
Sometimes I do that, too.
In my case it has nothing to do with dyslexia, as I don't have it, but if reading is a problem for you, then maybe you should check it out. I know one way to teach dyslexics is to have them write words backwards. For some reason that seems to help them.
As for Hebrew, when I began learnig it, I had no problems whatsoever reading from right to left. It was equally easy as reading from left to right.
_________________ BOLTZ 17/3 2012 - 12/11 2020 Beautiful, sweet, gentle, playful, loyal simply the best and one of a kind love you and miss you, dear boy