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A 10-year-old girl's poem about dyslexia has gone viral for all the right reasons.

 

Dyslexia can be a frustrating and self-esteem diminishing condition for those who live with it – especially when it hasn’t been diagnosed.

One 10-year-old girl has managed to sum up the misconceptions surrounding those with dyslexia, as well as the truth, in a powerful and “brilliant” poem.

UK grade six teacher Jane Broadis shared the poem her student wrote, titled ‘Dyslexia’, on Twitter, where it was liked and retweeted by tens of thousands of people.

The poem is a palindrome, which means that it can be read forward or backwards, line by line.

A palindrome is also the perfect way to present the message because those with the learning difference have trouble reading, writing, and spelling as words can appear jumbled or hard to discern.

On Twitter, the poem, whose author is known only as “AO”, received widespread praise, including from those with dyslexia.

Many expressed that they wished they could have read a similar poem or had a similar teacher when they were at school.

The teacher indicated she wanted to get it published somewhere, but as one user pointed out, now it has. And people are already enjoying and spreading its message.

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Top Comments

selkiem 5 years ago

LOVE this - would have loved this poem when my kids were younger - so difficult convincing bright kids they are bright because they see the world differently. We soldiered through, and all four of my dyslexic kids have done fine for themselves - 3 university degrees (1 in two languages)- and 2 college (soon to be three)- on top of those! ALL without any help as they had learned to work around their issues and their strengths more than made up for it.


The_Albert 5 years ago

Changing the order of lines is not what is usually understood by a palindrome, which refers to an arrangement of words in which the letters, read backwards, spell out the same words, eg "nurses run" or "was it a cat I saw?". In your use of the term you simply read the lines from bottom to top rather than from top to bottom. They don't say the same thing read up as read down. Silly to call it a palindrome.

selkiem 5 years ago

it wasn't about whether it was a palindrome or not, you clearly totally missed the entire message of this wonderful poem

The_Albert 5 years ago

I wasn't commenting on the poem but merely on the article's use of the word palindrome to describe it. The message of the poem is an entirely different matter. Try to keep up, will you?