I am Learning Disabled Not Stupid

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By Georgiakevin


Learning Disabilities

When I read, letters change and when I do math, numbers change. In addition I am not always the most coordinated person in the world. Learning disabilities should be a badge of honor but in many cases they are a badge of shame or a crutch. In spite of the many laws including IDEA act and the Vocational Rehabilitation Act of 1973 being learning disabled is considered a weakness and or a liability most of the time.

I grew up in a family of over achievers. All went on to be very well off. All are brilliant either with their minds or with their hands.........all seemingly except me. I was for many years considered the black sheep and embarrassment in my family. The words dyslexia, dyscalcula and learning disabilities were never ever uttered in my family. I was always the lazy one, the dumb one or even the loser, though that was never said, it was implied. My Father told me frequently I would never ever graduate from High School and my older brother didn't have much use for me. The strange thing was that since I was 12 I always had a job (delivering papers, grocery stock boy, lawn care)in spite of my learning disablites that I kept hidden as best as I could.

At school I was told how stupid and lazy I was over and over again. A couple of examples of hard times at school include; One incident when I was told by my Drivers Ed teacher I would never be able to get a Drivers' License. (Since then I have held Driver's licenses in 3 states and a motorcycle license as well as a Driver's Instructors license)Years later in another State I was a Driver Instructor. Another incident was the time I took a math class and studied very very hard for a test. I knew the concepts very well going in to the test but was very tired. What I didn't know is that the more tired I am the worst my learning disablity acts up. I began the test and unknown to me but because I was so tired the numbers changed often. My answers didn't check out and I doubted what I knew. The more stressed out I became the less I was certain of the process. At the end of the test I had a lot of numbers on the paper but no answers. I was too ashamed to turn my paper in. Three classes later I heard how the teacher was telling everyone how stupid I was. When I confronted her before the fourth class of the day she told me in front of 35 students that I was the stupidest student she ever had. I bought in to the "you are stupid" feedback. To cover up for this I became the class clown. I was forced to hide my feelings as very little in my life made sense.

When I was 15 nothing I did worked, studying didn't help, hard work didn't help.For a while I quit trying, what difference did it make? I was alone. There was no special education help . Teachers assumed I was stupid as did everyone else.

As an adult I learned to cover up and hide my disability but I had to work 3x harder than anyone else. Over the years I learned when I count numbers, that for me to get an accurate count I have to count until I get the same number three times. When I worked in Spokane WA. I worked at a Payless Shoes. We had to count checks, Canadian funds, credit cards and cash. The store would close at 10:00 P.M.. Often time I would be there until 3:00 A. M. and I lived an hour and a half away. I had to be back at work by 9:00 A. M. I covered up for my learning disabilities and as a manager I worked long hours and it cost me. I did not see my infant daughter awake for 3 months.

I reached a point in my life where I had enough. I was tired of being the loser everyone said I was and being seen as stupid. I ran my own business and then I went back to school. I finished my AA degree. I earned a Bachelors degree in Education. I was on the President's honor roll, became a member of Omicron Delta Kappa a national honors leadership group and Pi Delta Kappa an education group. I earned a Masters degree in Special Education. I have taught for 12 years in 3 states and have earned teacher of the month.

When I graduated my Father who was deep in to Alzheimer's came too and said "Well we didn't think you could do it but you did!" This is really the theme my family has for me though they would deny it. My family now uses me as an example of people who made it in life when no one thought they could.

I have learning disabilities. Don't pity me and don't be afraid of me. My learning disabilities push me to succeed. My disabilities aren't contagious. They only make life more challenging for me. I am proud of what I have become, barriers I have built bridges over, and paths I have found around barriers I could not build bridges over. It all comes down to this.... learning disabilities make it necessary for me to go the extra mile. I am proud to be going the extra mile and I go the extra mile with my head held high, proud of what I have accomplished but know there is still so much to do. For me there can never be a break from going the extra mile but the rewards are sweet. I challenge everyone to join me as I go the extra mile.

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cvaughn570 profile image

cvaughn570  says:
3 months ago

What an inspiring story for those with or without disabilities! It just goes to show that drive and determination are the key factors to success.

Kudos to you,

Carol

Georgiakevin profile image

Georgiakevin  says:
3 months ago

Thank you for your kind words Carol, this was a very difficult hub for me to write. I really didn't want to write it but it was something I had to do. It was emotionally draining for me. For you to take your time to read and comment on it makes it seem worth the effort thank you.

rmr profile image

rmr  says:
2 months ago

You deserve much respect for your hard work, and the result it has brought! Thanks for sharing.

spryte profile image

spryte  says:
2 months ago

kudos to you Georgiakeven - a very inspiring tale of determination. What makes me chuckle though is the first line of your second paragraph "I grew up in a family of over achievers." :) Did you never realize that you were just as much an over achiever once you had decided on a course and pursued it? I don't say that with any malice...I just don't think your family or even you realized just how much alike you all really were. It's just that what came easily to some...you had to fight for. That definitely makes you a winner in my book.

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