Author Topic: honestly beginning to think i have dysgraphia  (Read 1763 times)

when i saw the title i thought it meant you cant read graphs or something

when i saw the title i thought it meant you cant read graphs or something

it's just graphs, nothing else

way too many people have bad handwriting

i hate when you are trying to cheat off of some fool and you cant cause you cant read his chicken scratch like wtf


my handwriting used to be worse than OP's because of dyslexia but I guess learning cursive helped

my handwriting used to be worse than OP's because of dyslexia but I guess learning cursive helped

this lexus?

no he's talking about lexia

you know the one at the club

[img width=500]http://www.wired.com/wp-content/uploads/images_blogs/autopia/2014/01/01-lexus-rcf.jpg[/img
this lexus?

the forget is a suxel

my handwriting used to be worse than OP's because of dyslexia but I guess learning cursive helped
my cursive is just regular print except I don't lift my pencil up

my cursive is just regular print except I don't lift my pencil up
my cursive is actual cursive but with some of the letters switched out for print and connected

whenever i sign checks or stuff i just write my name but fast and without lifting the pencil

What a world in which having stuffty handwriting is considered a diagnosable mental condition.
My handwriting's neat and cute, to the degree that sometimes people on 4chan think I'm a girl when I drawcigarette. :panda:

What a world in which having stuffty handwriting is considered a diagnosable mental condition.

i find that ridiculous as well, but it's there

My brother is diagnosed with dysgraphia.
It's a legitimate disorder as equally obstructive as dyslexia.
He's slow to write and has difficulty maintaining shape and size of letters. Often his writing is bad enough that it's illegible even to himself.
Another side effect is it inhibits his ability to draw. His drawing skill is equal to an 8 year old despite being 18.

If you think you have it speak to your school nurse/counsellor or even your doctor about getting it officiallyt ested and diagnosed. At school they should provide you with a laptop for writing, and one in exams (or the option of dictating to someone else).
If you do have it then make full use of any support you get or else you're not giving yourself an equal chance thaty our peers get.