It is very common for individuals who are autistic or who have ADHD to fidget a lot. Whilst it may frustrate those around them they do not do it to purposely annoy or others and can’t help it most of the time. We are now going to look into some of the reasons why they may fidget and things you can do to support them. Many people with the conditions, particularly ADHD, have lots of
I was diagnosed with dyslexia from a young age, and I remember I struggled with the English language as well as a few other classes. Throughout primary and secondary school even though I was classed as dyslexic I never got any help. I still also remember the day where my parents said I spoke German better than I did English. And in university I had to take a second dyslexia test because they didn’t believe
Personally, I don’t know if I have any correlation to these. Like I’ve been dyslexic for as long as I know, and I’ve been depressed since the age of 13. There could be times when they go hand in hand but from my experience, I don’t see it. But I am just one person in a number of billions, so other people who have both could have depressive episodes due to theirs. Life with dyslexia
Having dyslexia makes communication harder, because sometimes in stressful situations you can easily trip over your own words. But it can easily be done if you’re talking to a friend or family. I have accidentally done a spoonerism to some comedic effect in front of people and in important calls. It’s an easy mistake to make but if people know you have dyslexia and accept that it can happen, then it’s okay. But in a
Looking back on it I guess my special interest has been gaming, since from a young age and currently still, I play game. There are other things I do but gaming is always the thing I fall back up on. Reading, writing, movies, baking, photography are but a few of the hobbies I have. But in recent years I’ve been experiencing burn out, but it could be due to age, or modern games. But there