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wblastyn
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09 Jun 2010, 9:41 am

Although my writing looks neat and legible, it takes a lot of effort for me to make it like this. After writing for about 2 minutes, my arm starts to ache really badly, so much so that it puts me off writing at all. Could this be a form of dysgraphia?

It takes me forever to read a book, like at least a month, and I get tired while reading easily, and also find it difficult to concentrate. I find myself losing my place and having to re-read sections of the book because I've forgotten what I just read. Could this be a form of dyslexia?

I have no co-ordination, I was terrible at PE, etc.. could this be dyspraxia?

I am terrible at mental arithmatic, my mind just goes blank if I have to work out a calculation in my head. I am ok if I'm allowed to use a calculator, and managed to get an A in my maths GCSE, and B in AS level maths. Could this be dyscalcula?



mechanicalgirl39
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09 Jun 2010, 10:24 am

I don't think you have dyscalculia, but the others do sound likely.


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Asp-Z
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09 Jun 2010, 10:34 am

Dyspraxia also causes bad handwriting, I hate having to write and I'm diagnosed with dyspraxia. If I write very slowly I can make it decent, but I do really mean very slowly, and it'd take a lot of effort. It's simply not practical.

Today I did a test and the writing made my hand hurt, too.

I'd never heard of dysgraphia before, but I just looked it up and TBH I can't tell the difference between it and dyspraxia.



liloleme
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09 Jun 2010, 12:46 pm

I have dyscalculia and its a bit like dylexia. I read numbers backwards...like 42 is 24. I have a very hard time remembering numbers and can not grap higher level mathematical formulas....I can not understand algebra.
I taught myself to add, subtract and multiply by visualizing numbers and division confused the heck out of me until I convinced myself that its sort of backwards multiplication, basically like subtraction is addition in reverse.



anbuend
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09 Jun 2010, 5:21 pm

There are many kinds of dyscalcula. It's very common for one kind of dyscalculic person to suck at arithmetic but excel at say calculus.


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09 Jun 2010, 10:38 pm

t's very common for one kind of dyscalculic person to suck at arithmetic but excel at say calculus.

Replace calculus with high school algebra and 2D geometry proofs and you've described me pretty accurately. :) If it's pure logic I'm great at it, if it involves calculation or spatial perception of any kind I'm bound to get it wrong. Does this count as dyscalculia, then? I've wondered for a long time...



silentbob15
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10 Jun 2010, 12:22 am

liloleme wrote:
I have dyscalculia and its a bit like dylexia. I read numbers backwards...like 42 is 24. I have a very hard time remembering numbers and can not grap higher level mathematical formulas....I can not understand algebra.
I taught myself to add, subtract and multiply by visualizing numbers and division confused the heck out of me until I convinced myself that its sort of backwards multiplication, basically like subtraction is addition in reverse.

You sound like me, thats how I learned division too, I also have dyscalculia dysgraphia & dyspraxia, I am only slightly dyslexic,
I read quite well but do mix up my some words or misread them on occasion



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10 Jun 2010, 12:54 am

Handwriting. Lots of people have poor handwriting and as people use computers more than pens it ain't going to get any better. Don't worry.

Reading. My brother had dyslexia so I have a fair idea of what it's like. You don't have it.

Co-ordination. Lots of aspies are terrible at PE and games including me. If you have a good games teacher then he'll keep plugging on until you find something you're good at (in my case it was distance running). If he doesn't care then you'll just get lumped in with the others.

Finally, if you got a B in your AS Level Maths then you're better at it than I was. I got a C in my A level and it meant that I did my degree at Manchester rather than Oxford.

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carltcwc
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10 Jun 2010, 1:07 am

Dyspraxia is probablly common with 80% of people with aspergers.
Dysgraphia is more than bad hand writting. It also involves poor spelling and sentance structuring. Especially with writting paragraphs.
Dyslexia might may be possible as well but the symptoms you described could also be adhd. Personally I have such poor reading comprehension that I cant even understand how to pay my bills, fill out basic paperwork, or know which phone number on a paper to call and ask questions about the paperwork. This also has to do with me not being able to consentrate on reading a full peice of paper.
Dyscalcula usually involves being bad at math. I dont know much about it. Im good at math but not the other things.



pensieve
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10 Jun 2010, 1:11 am

wblastyn wrote:
Although my writing looks neat and legible, it takes a lot of effort for me to make it like this. After writing for about 2 minutes, my arm starts to ache really badly, so much so that it puts me off writing at all. Could this be a form of dysgraphia?

It takes me forever to read a book, like at least a month, and I get tired while reading easily, and also find it difficult to concentrate. I find myself losing my place and having to re-read sections of the book because I've forgotten what I just read. Could this be a form of dyslexia?

I have no co-ordination, I was terrible at PE, etc.. could this be dyspraxia?

I am terrible at mental arithmatic, my mind just goes blank if I have to work out a calculation in my head. I am ok if I'm allowed to use a calculator, and managed to get an A in my maths GCSE, and B in AS level maths. Could this be dyscalcula?


All these symptoms relate to inattentive ADD. The arm ache could be because you don't write by hand enough. I had this too but when I study I write notes by hand so I don't get that ache anymore. When I read off meds I get tired easily or keep checking how long the chapter is. I wear correction shoes for my posture and have poor fine motor skills.

To have dyslexia, dyspraxia, dysgraphia or dyscalculia you need to have it pretty bad. I used to think I had dyscalculia because I hated maths and found it hard. But I can do math ok when on meds.
There are so many symptoms of dyslexia are common in AS and ADD too because similar parts of the brain are affected.
If you really want to know go for a diagnosis. But if it's just something annoying and not causing real problems in your life just leave it be.


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wblastyn
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10 Jun 2010, 7:40 am

pensieve wrote:
All these symptoms relate to inattentive ADD. The arm ache could be because you don't write by hand enough. I had this too but when I study I write notes by hand so I don't get that ache anymore. When I read off meds I get tired easily or keep checking how long the chapter is. I wear correction shoes for my posture and have poor fine motor skills.

To have dyslexia, dyspraxia, dysgraphia or dyscalculia you need to have it pretty bad. I used to think I had dyscalculia because I hated maths and found it hard. But I can do math ok when on meds.
There are so many symptoms of dyslexia are common in AS and ADD too because similar parts of the brain are affected.
If you really want to know go for a diagnosis. But if it's just something annoying and not causing real problems in your life just leave it be.

Funny you should mention ADD. Before coming across AS I was convinced I had ADD, and mentioned to to the psychiatrist, who I was seeing for depression and anxiety, and she just told me to "get that out of your head". She said the same thing when I tried bringing up AS...

When I was diagnosed with AS by an educational psychologist, I mentioned ADD to her and she said people with AS tend to have ADD-like symptoms but medication wouldnt help. I didn't really believe that, so I asked my GP for ritalin and she said it has to be prescribed by a psychiatrist...

So are there any "alternative" treatments for ADD? Omega-3 perhaps?