Dyslexia is when your brain has trouble reading because it sees letters and words in a different way than most people.
Imagine you're looking at a puzzle with all the pieces mixed up, that's what it feels like for someone with dyslexia. When they try to read, their brain might mix up the order of letters or see them in a jumble, just like those puzzle pieces.
Letters can look like they’re dancing, and words can switch places or flip around. It’s not because they aren’t smart, it's because their brain works differently with letters and sounds.
Like Reading Through a Funhouse Mirror
Think of reading as looking in a mirror, most people see the letters just fine, but for someone with dyslexia, it’s like looking through a funhouse mirror. The letters might look backward, upside down, or even stretched out, making it tricky to read smoothly.
But guess what? Just like you can learn to walk after taking your first wobbly steps, people with dyslexia can learn to read, they just need the right tools and support!
Examples
- A child who reverses letters in words, like writing 'was' as 'saw'
- Someone who struggles to read a sentence but can easily understand it when it's spoken aloud
- An adult who reads slowly and often misreads numbers or dates
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See also
- What Is Dyslexia? | Dyslexia Explained?
- How Does Dreams Are Weird. Here’s Why. Work?
- How Does Dreams and Hallucinations Work?
- How Does 2-Minute Neuroscience: Amygdala Work?
- How Does Neuroplasticity Work?