Stop Listening to the People Who Tell You, You Can not
3:40:34 2024-07-28 788

Growing up, I was a happy kid, but not a great student. I was a C+ student, at best. In math, I earned D grades, even with a tutor. The only hint there might be potential was that my teachers uniformly told my parents I was brighter than my grades would suggest. Was that a compliment or simply a rationalization?

In tenth grade, my father was summoned to the guidance counselor’s office where he was told I should be removed from the academic college curriculum and placed in a curriculum for the trades. That would have been fine I guess, but I lacked any mechanical aptitude whatsoever. My father knew this. My father declined the counselor’s offer to place me elsewhere and insisted I remain on the college track simply saying, “I think George will figure it out. It may just take him a little longer.” My father only told me that story 12 years later when I completed my first doctoral training. Along the way, I had three different advisors tell me I would never finish graduate school (they were dismayed that I was even admitted). And two faculty told me I just didn’t have what it took to be a psychologist.

So, it turned out I’m dyslexic and have some variation on the theme of attention deficits and hyperactivity. The revelation was made when I was in graduate school. It was nice to know that I had a “thing” which helped explain some of uniqueness of my life. But I wasn’t about to let that “thing” define me. So how does a kid with dyslexia and attention deficit become a musician, college professor, researcher, and author of over 20 books? My dad was right. I figured out a way to compensate for what has been called a disability by recruiting supplemental brain pathways (the “how” of that is material for another post). Even today I read less than the average person in words per minute, but I can read!

I’m certainly not the first person to overcome dyslexia or attention and hyperactivity challenges. But in retrospect what I learned was the challenge is less the disability and more what you believe about the disability – and yourself. So in other words, your attitude really matters.

 

 

Reality Of Islam

A Mathematical Approach to the Quran

10:52:33   2024-02-16  

mediation

2:36:46   2023-06-04  

what Allah hates the most

5:1:47   2023-06-01  

allahs fort

11:41:7   2023-05-30  

striving for success

2:35:47   2023-06-04  

Imam Ali Describes the Holy Quran

5:0:38   2023-06-01  

livelihood

11:40:13   2023-05-30  

silence about wisdom

3:36:19   2023-05-29  

MOST VIEWS

Importance of Media

9:3:43   2018-11-05

Illuminations

people in need

4:25:57   2023-02-11

loyalty is strength

10:55:53   2022-06-13

belief cause cleanliness

10:47:11   2022-11-22

pure nature

7:34:7   2023-02-28

your path

12:10:56   2022-11-17

education importance

7:26:19   2022-04-08

remember who supported you

2:2:13   2022-10-08



IMmORTAL Words
LATEST Use Bono Thinking Method Interpretation of Sura Hud - Verses 72-74 Psychological Traces of Patience in the Lives of Individuals This $1 Food Could Help Fight Diabetes and Heart Disease Graphene Is Stretchable? Physicists Make Miracle Material Bend Like Never Before Tardigrade Natural Compound in Fruit and Vegetables Found to Slash Heart Disease and Diabetes Risk New Semiconductor Technology Could Supercharge 6G Delivery Carbon Capture More Expensive Than Switching to Renewables, Stanford Study Reveals How to Transfer Information from Short-Term Memory to Long-Term Memory Are You Eating Plastic? New Research Shows Serious Health Risks New Material Supercharges Solar Panel Power & Lifespan