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Are you dyslexic and/or dyspraxic and/or ambidextrous?
Dyslexic 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Dyspraxic 29%  29%  [ 4 ]
Ambidextrous 14%  14%  [ 2 ]
Dyslexic and Dyspraxic 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Dyslexic and Ambidextrous 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Dyslexic, Dyspraxic and Ambidextrous 7%  7%  [ 1 ]
Dyspraxic and Ambidextrous 21%  21%  [ 3 ]
None of the above 29%  29%  [ 4 ]
Total votes : 14

TheBrain
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19 Sep 2011, 10:30 pm

Sometimes, I have to read a sentence three or four times. It takes me at least twice as long to read something as a normal person (although my comprehension is rated superior). I have to use my hands to determine left and right when giving directions (although my map memorization is almost photographic). I write the letters in words in the wrong order. I will be thinking a number correctly, but write or say it in the wrong order. I sometimes write letters backward or up-side-down. When writing a b or d I have to stop and think about which way it goes. I am ambidextrous and I recently found out that I am dyspraxic. I thought other people might share and I wanted to see what percentage of us this affects.


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TheBrain
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19 Sep 2011, 10:31 pm

I'm sorry everyone. I hope we can still get a rather accurate result.


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MakaylaTheAspie
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20 Sep 2011, 12:13 am

It's alright. Everyone makes mistakes once in a blue moon. :)


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Tuttle
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20 Sep 2011, 12:53 am

I think I'm about at the borderline of dyspraxia and not.

Hand-eye coordination related tasks are best described by me not being able to execute what I know to do, even for simple tasks.

I'm pretty sure I qualified for childhood dyspraxia of speech. I was completely unable to pronounce certain sounds, though I would actively try to. I didn't have control of details like intonation even throughout middle school. I still completely can't make some sounds that others can - if people describe how to make these sounds, I can't do what they say to do. The issues I had when I was younger, people were able to work with me, explicitly teaching me how to position my mouth, and over years eventually I started being able to make the correct sounds.

I don't know whether it was considered significant enough to get a diagnosis like that, but it was significant enough to drastically confuse people and convince people I couldn't read because I couldn't pronounce the words.

Dunno whether I should say "none" or "dyspraxia" though.



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20 Sep 2011, 1:16 am

Problems with speech is a very autistic symptom.
When I talk all my words come out in the wrong order. Sometimes medication can fix this.
So, I usually refer to it as an ADHD thing. Not saying you have ADHD but it's always dyspraxia.
Most frontal lobe disorders have similar symptoms.

I could probably pass for acquired dyspraxia but even my clumsy hand movements and unusual gait are not as severe to require a diagnosis. My epilepsy makes me kinda shaky.


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Tuttle
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20 Sep 2011, 2:27 am

pensieve wrote:
Problems with speech is a very autistic symptom.


Well, yes, ASDs are one of the most common co-morbids with dyspraxia.

Quote:
So, I usually refer to it as an ADHD thing. Not saying you have ADHD but it's always dyspraxia.


I'm sure that I don't have ADHD, I've been actively tested and it was determined that I only have AS-related executive functioning issues, not a co-morbid of ADHD.

The question really is whether I qualify as having had enough problems to be considered dyspraxia.



TheBrain
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20 Sep 2011, 11:08 am

I've never actually been diagnosed, but I display a lot of the symptoms. When you consider all of my other issues, it makes sense.


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Christopherwillson
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20 Sep 2011, 11:52 am

Don't worry, the second time is always better.. people who never fail don't learn :wink:


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TheBrain
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20 Sep 2011, 12:09 pm

Then, wish I didn't learn. :D And I wish I only made a mistake only "once in a blue moon." Try like, a hundred times a day. I probably had to correct thirty misspellings and grammar mistakes just in this short paragraph.


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ValentineWiggin
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20 Sep 2011, 12:16 pm

I'm hyperlexic, and though I'm not diagnosed as dyslexic, I always when in a hurry mix up p's and b's-
from what I've read, the more commonly-recognized manifestations are flipping letters on a vertical, not horizontal axis.


:shrug:


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TheBrain
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20 Sep 2011, 12:30 pm

I have excellent word decoding abilities, and read at a 12th grade level in fifth grade. What does that make me hyper-dyslexic. :shrug:


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