Right Brain Ronnie
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #81
No i am right handed but I did hear that left handed people are significantly more likely to be neurodivergent than right handed people and that there’s an even greater correlation with people that have hyper-mobile joints!
When I was at university I ended up writing my exam papers in capital letters because otherwise there was no way anybody would be able to mark them!
I am right handed too. But always asked what handed I am, I still don't know why this makes any difference to my diagnosis at all.
I do shoot a bow and arrow left handed apparently!
I didn't know about the hyper mobility, I was with a girl once who was hyper mobile......fun times.
Capital letters are so much easier also, who ever invented lower case! I used to often start sentence when writing in small letters and add capital anywhere and anywhere, it just seemed write at the time until the teachers red biro ringed them like a bingo card.
Excellently put.I have heard this argument a lot, that we shouldn’t be labelling people. The fact is though that neurodivergent people are labelled with or without a diagnosis but without the labels are far more damaging, as a kid these can be ‘wierd’ ‘annoying’ ‘lazy’ ‘the naughty child in the class’, ‘antisocial’..a problem child. The fact is that neurodivergent people are constantly being compared to neurotypical people and judged by the same standards, they are often told if they would just pull themselves together they wouldn’t be so dysfunctional. These labels stay with people throughout life and cause serious mental health issues, some children end up hiding away and refusing to go to school because it’s too much for them.
The fact is that these are medical diagnosis and should be treated in the same way as something physical. Just because you can’t see them in the way that you can other disabilities, it doesn’t mean that they are any less of a daily challenge for the people who have them.