I'm dyslexic, and it takes me longer to memorize and to embody the character so I can really own it.
I was dyslexic, so math and formulas were not necessarily my strong suit.
I'm a human being, I'm not a machine. I'm 72. I'm dyslexic.
The world is so ass-backwards it almost makes you wish you were dyslexic.
I wasn't dyslexic, I was just very slow. I passed my time daydreaming.
I'm very grateful to being dyslexic and I owe my career to being dyslexic.
Well, hello. My name is Lin. But if you're dyslexic, call me Nil.
Being dyslexic, I was told that I was an idiot all the time.
One thing about mildly dyslexic people - they're good at setting everything else aside to pursue one goal.
I'm a bit dyslexic so I found learning to read hard. I muddled up the letters but learnt to power through.
Unlikely things to see in a Valentine's card - "I may be dyslexic but that doesn't mean I don't vole you."
I'm a dyslexic person, so I avoid books.
I've given him more mixed signals than a dyslexic Morse code operator.
I think that maybe growing up and being dyslexic early on, the visual quality of cookbooks specifically was something very enticing to me.
I loved 'Harry Potter' growing up. I'm dyslexic and a slow reader, but I could get through the thick ones in days!
Being dyslexic, creativity was my way of expressing myself.
I'm completely dyslexic - it's the writing part. People read what I've written, and they have no idea what I'm trying to say.
D.C. is a hard city to grow up in. I couldn't find my footing there. Also, I got a late start academically, and I was dyslexic.
At school I was really heavily dyslexic, so I really struggled academically with reading and writing.
Quick: noise made by a dyslexic duck
An incredibly high percentage of successful entrepreneurs are dyslexic. That's one of the little-known facts.
I'm dyslexic, although they didn't have a word for it when I was in grade school. The teachers said I had 'word blindness.
A dyslexic man walks into a bra.
I'm dyslexic.
I'm quite dyslexic in school.
I was dyslexic - still am dyslexic - and as child, I found things very difficult. I think my father realised that in acting and stuff I could express myself.
So I'm half deaf - and dyslexic. How about that? Nobody's perfect, and I'm proud of my defects.
That said, being dyslexic, I wasn't a great reader when I was kid.
I'm completely dyslexic, so academia was never really my path.
I'm dyslexic, although they didn't have a word for it when I was in grade school. The teachers said I had 'word blindness.'
My sister is dyslexic, and she's so smart, so intelligent in all of the ways that matter.
I'm kind of emotionally dyslexic, and when I feel vulnerable or nervous, I laugh.
When a child knows that he or she is dyslexic, that it's the way their brain is programmed, and it's not their fault, that makes all the difference in the world.
Both my sons are dyslexic, and so, too, in a much milder form, is one of my daughters.
I'm well beyond dyslexic: I have no sense of direction; I never know where I am.
I was incredibly shy and insecure as a child. I was bullied. I was dyslexic. I had an immigrant single parent. I was the opposite of that kind of ideal, cool girl thing.
I'm dyslexic, I have attention-deficit disorder, and I've got something like a hereditary tremor.
I like to call myself numerically dyslexic, but officially, I am mathematically thick.
I've got a funny way of looking at things. It's because I'm dyslexic, and I was diagnosed with ADD when I was younger. And I'm left-handed as well.
I'm dyslexic, which means I have trouble reading and writing. So images really speak to me.
I have a driver in London because I am slightly dyslexic and cannot drive in the U.K.; after all, the traffic runs the opposite way to that in the United States.
I probably went all the way to junior high school before a school doctor told me that I was 'dyslexic.'
Love is blind, there was no doubt about it. In Tara's case it was also deaf, dumb, dyslexic, had a bad hip and the beginnings of Alzheimer's
My greatest gift in life was being dyslexic. It made me special. It made me different. If I had not been dyslexic, I wouldn't have needed sports.
If I had not been dyslexic, I wouldn't have needed sports. I would have been like every other kid. Instead, I found my one thing, and I was never going to let go of it. That little dyslexic kid is always in the back of your head.
I was a dyslexic kid.
I was very active but I was dyslexic and had a really hard time at school.
I feel like every person has a disability in some way. Whether you're dyslexic or Republican or whatever.
Being very dyslexic I couldn't even tie my own shoe laces until the age of 21 and I struggled at school.
I don't want anyone to feel they can't achieve their ambitions if they are dyslexic.
Technology can be an enormous enabler. I'll give you one example. I have never really talked about this before, but I am dyslexic and I didn't ?nd that out at school.
The one advantage of being dyslexic is that you are never tempted to look back and idealise your childhood.
A lot of people say they are dyslexic; some have to realize that they are just stupid.
I cringe when I watch myself on camera. I'm not articulate, and I'm dyslexic, but somehow it works.
There's nothing that special about me. I'm just a hard-working guy, I'm dyslexic, I had to overcome a lot of things like that.
If you're dyslexic I think it's very important to know that you can do anything you want and it's not simply because you're dyslexic that you should be shoved on the side.
I was dyslexic, so I was put in the silly class at school.
I could become like that dyslexic agnostic in the old joke - the one who lies in bed and tries to figure out if his dog exists.
Mario, what do you get when you cross an insomniac, an unwilling agnostic and a dyslexic?
The trouble is, I don't read aloud well, and never have. I grew up dyslexic, and it's remained uncomfortable for me even as an adult.
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