Most adult dyslexics will exhibit at least 10 of the following traits
or behaviours. These characteristics can vary from day-to-day or
minute-to-minute.
CONTACT: click here to book an in office consultation or
arrange a telephone consultation.
Adult Characteristics of Dyslexics
Career
Employed in job that hides difficulties reading,
writing or spelling.
Hides difficulties from co-workers, friends and
sometimes family.
Becomes frustrated at “planning meetings” and
sequential tasks; just wants to get on with it.
Becomes frustrated or overwhelmed with long forms or
sequential processes.
Thrives in careers where visual-spatial/hands-on
talents can be realised: For example business owner, engineer, trades
(carpentry, plumbing, electrical), interior decorator, actor, musician,
police/investigation, athlete, and business executive (usually with
staff or assistant).
May pass up promotions or advancement opportunities
which require more administrative work.
May have difficulty focusing and staying on one task,
yet may feel comfortable managing many different tasks simultaneously.
Difficulty with tests - passing standard tests can be
a barrier to career advancement.
Highly successful/over achiever.
May be a perfectionist and overreact when a mistake is
made.
Outside-the-box thinker.
Very controlling and operates according to very strict
rules.
Learns best through hands-on experience,
demonstrations, experimentation, observation, and visual aids.
General
Highly intuitive, known to have “street smarts.” Is
often quick and accurate in judging personalities of others.
May be able to sense emotions and energy of others.
Remembers struggling in school.
Frequently have dyslexic children and may experience
guilt when seeing own child struggle. May be embarrassed when reading to
own children or helping them with homework.
Easily distracted/annoyed by noises and other things
in environment.
May appear to “zone out” and be unaware that it is
happening.
Misspeaks, misuses, or mispronounces words without
realising it.
May have poor balance.
May confuse past conversations or be accused of “not
listening.”
Difficulty remembering names of people without tricks,
but usually remembers faces.
Difficulty remembering verbal instructions or
directions. Likes to see them visually.
May have poor recall of conversations or sequence of
events.
Math, Time Management & Directions
May be able to perform high level maths, but can't
show it on paper.
May excel at maths, or may still rely on tricks for
remembering maths facts.
Relies on calculators or finger counting.
When paying may prefer to use “plastic” instead of
cash to avoid dealing with loose change.
May have difficulty with left/right and/or North,
South, East, West.
May have difficulty reading maps.
May have anxiety or stress when driving in unfamiliar
places. Relies on others to drive when possible.
May lose track of time and is often late, or is
compulsively early.
Finds it difficult to estimate how long a task will
take to complete.
Reading, Writing and Spelling
Likes larger, clear print over unusual fonts.
Avoids reading out loud. May dislike public speaking.
Has adopted compensatory tricks to remember spelling
and words that sound the same (their, there, they're), or has poor or
inconsistent spelling.
Frequently has to re-read sentences in order to
understand it.
Gets tired or becomes bored quickly while reading.
Relies on others (assistants, spouses, significant
others) for written correspondence.
Uncertainty with words, punctuation, and spelling when
writing. Reliance on spell-check and grammar-check.
Poor handwriting; poor or inconsistent spelling.
Writes with all capital letters, or mixes capital
letters within words. Abbreviates words frequently.
Behaviour, Health and Personality
May have a short fuse or is easily frustrated,
angered, or annoyed.
Easily stressed and overwhelmed in certain situations.
May have low self-esteem.
Self-conscious when speaking in a group. May have
difficulty getting thoughts out, pause frequently, speak in halting
phrases, or leave sentences incomplete. This may worsen with stress or
distraction.
Sticks to what they know; fear of new tasks or any
situation where they are out of comfort zone.
Extremely disorderly, often losing and mislaying
things.
Compulsively orderly, getting stressed when order is
disturbed.
Confusion, stress, physical health issues, time
pressure, and fatigue will significantly increase symptoms.