This should be an interesting thread. I don't think I've seen one before that invited a discussion of LDs in general among members.
I have Nonverbal Learning Disorder. As a result, I have impaired abstract reasoning and visual processing skills, among less severe symptoms. Because of these traits (even more than because of my autism traits), I was unable to attend mainstream school. I also failed every standardized test I took as a kid because I couldn't generalize the concepts I learned and apply them to questions that were posed in an unfamiliar format or context. You'd think it would've affected my self-esteem to constantly fail academically, but I liked learning and I didn't care about official results.
When it became apparent that my test scores were not going to improve, though, my parents decided to give me full control of my education, and I was unschooled. I was very lucky in that I was highly motivated to read and learn independently. I moved ahead of my peers in middle school, leaning towards my strengths in reading and writing. I wrote novellas, short stories, and essays. I won two awards for my writing and was published for the first time when I was sixteen. I even did well in math, working at my own pace. In that kind of environment, NVLD didn't hurt me at all, practically.
It affected me more in high school, when my parents took over my education again and enrolled me in an online school that my older siblings had graduated through. I struggled with the math and didn't have a teacher or tutor to help me, or access to accommodations. The science courses were Creationist. I'd already read all of the books assigned in my English courses by the time I was eleven. Throughout all of that, I always wanted transfer to a public school, but I was never able to develop the skills necessary to attend, although by this point that was more due to worsening autism symptoms than academic issues. I ended up graduating a year late because of how much I struggled to cope with the online school's curriculum.
I'm not sure how much NVLD affects me outside of academics because it's hard to tell where autism ends and NVLD begins sometimes. Getting through high school was a lot tougher because of it, though, and I wish that my parents had listened to my complaints about the curriculum. I think it would've been much easier if I'd continued learning on my own as I did in elementary and middle school.
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I have not the kind affections of a pigeon. - Ralph Waldo Emerson