Dyslexic? You're not   alone... 
         yslexia is a syndrome   of many and varied symptoms affecting over 40 million American children and   adults. Many with dyslexia and related learning and attention disorders realize   quite early that they are not like their peers. Their learning and coordination   or klutzy difficulties often lead to ridicule and/or self-recrimination —   leading them to feel dumb and depressed-isolated. As a result, one can only   wonder just how many potential creative geniuses — how many Einstein’s and Da   Vinci’s — have been stigmatized and pushed aside?  All too often,   learning-disabled children grow up to be underemployed adults, shunted into   routine, dead-end occupations for life. Some have difficulties maintaining   families and raising children properly. Many drift into drugs and alcohol — even   crime. Their loss and cost to society is incalculable. And tragically, this   staggering loss was, and is, preventable! 
        Since dyslexia is often a self-compensating disorder that can often be   overcome with time, effort and understanding, it is crucial to provide dyslexics   with success stories of well known individuals so that they don’t give up and   indeed persevere. Thus for example, there have been many dyslexics that have   made tremendous contributions to mankind. They include famous entertainers,   designers, architects, writers, athletes, jurists, physicians, scientists, and   political and business leaders. 
        These successful dyslexics learned to overcome or sidestep their barriers,   permitting them to accomplish their dreams and desires. In fact, at times their   disorder was found to be a catalyst for success — forcing them to develop and   utilize hidden talents. Often, their most crucial "life-saving"characteristic   was perseverance. They never gave up no matter how difficult the task before   them seemed. Their successful lives, despite dyslexia, shows us that "miracles"   can be accomplished so long as dyslexics are encouraged by loving parents and   caring teachers to believe in themselves.  
        An inspiring sample of some self-compensated famous and successful dyslexics   follows. But just remember — for every famous or well-known dyslexic, there are   thousands and thousands more who have made it, despite their disorder. Sadly,   there are millions that have not — that could have! 
          
       
       
       
      
        
          
             ablo was born   in 1881 in Malaga, Spain. He was a famous, controversial, and trend-setting art   icon. Pablo attended local parochial schools and had a very difficult time. He   is described as having difficulty reading the orientation of the letters and   labeled a dyslexic, and despite the initial difficulties was able to catch up   with the curriculum. However, dyslexia made school difficult and he never really   benefited from his education. Dyslexia would trouble Picasso for the rest of his   life.  
                Pablo’s father was an art teacher in Malaga, and encouraged Pablo to attend.   Pablo enrolled in the school in 1892. Despite the difficulties that his learning   disabilities posed, it became clear that Pablo had an incredible talent. From an   early age Pablo Picasso had developed the sense of how people wanted to be seen   and how others saw them. Over the course of his career he developed a unique   sense of beauty and style that seemed to call to people. Pablo painted things as   he saw them — out of order, backwards or upside down. His paintings demonstrated   the power of imagination, raw emotion, and creativity on the human psyche. As   others before him, Pablo Picasso took art to a new level. A prolific painter,   some of his famous works includes The Young Ladies of Avigon, Old Man with   Guitar, and Guernica.  | 
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      Tom Cruise 
      
        
          
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             om Cruise was   born fighting. He grew up poor, and his family moved around a lot while his   father looked for work. Tom never spent a lot of time any one school because the   family moved around a lot. Tom, like his mother, suffered from dyslexia and was   put into the remedial classes at school. Tom is right handed when writing, but   does most things left handed. While Tom was not an academic success, he focused   on athletics and competed in many sports. A knee injury derailed his hopes of a   promising athletic career.  
                Tom Cruise then spent a year in a Franciscan monastery, but the priesthood   was not for him. While in high school, he appeared in a number of plays, and   with his mother’s encouragement and support, pursued a career in acting. Tom   focused all his energy on developing his acting career, once again revealing his   drive and dogged determination.  He never let his learning disability stand in   the way of his success.   | 
           
        
       
       
       
      Richard Branson 
      
        
          
             ichard Branson,   founder and chairman of London-based Virgin Group, didn't breeze through school.   In fact, school was something of a nightmare for him. His scores on standardized   tests were dismal, pointing to a dismal future. He was embarrassed by his   dyslexia and found his education becoming more and more difficult. He felt as if   he had been written off.  
                However, his educators failed to detect his true gifts. His ability to   connect with people on a personal level, an intuitive sense of people, was not   detected until a frustrated Richard Branson started a student newspaper with   fellow student Jonny Gems. The incredible success of the Student was but the   start of a richly diverse and successful career.   
              Despite the difficulties and challenges posed by his dyslexia, by focusing on   his inner talents, Richard Branson successfully overcame his difficulties. From   his first taste of success and believing in himself, Richard Branson never   looked back.  | 
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      Leonard Da Vinci 
      
        
          
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             orn in 1452, Da   Vinci was sent to Florence in his teens to apprentice as a painter under Andrea   del Verrocchio. He quickly developed his own artistic style which was unique and   contrary to tradition, even going so far as to devised his own special formula   of paint. His style was characterized by diffuse shadows and subtle hues and   marked the beginning of the High Renaissance period.  
                Da Vinci dedicated himself to understanding the mysteries of nature, and his   insightful contributions to science and technology were legendary. As the   archetypal Renaissance man, Leonardo helped set an ignorant and superstitious   world on a course of reason, science, learning, and tolerance. He was an   internationally renowned inventor, scientists, engineer, architect, painter,   sculptor, musician, mathematician, anatomist, astronomer, geologists, biologist,   and philosopher in his time.  
              Da Vinci was also believed to suffer from a number of learning disabilities   including dyslexia and attention deficit disorder. Some believe that the   initiation of many more projects than he ever completed suggest that he had   attention deficit disorder. Strong evidence in Da Vinci’s manuscripts and   letters corroborates the diagnosis of dyslexia. It appears that Leonardo wrote   his notes backwards, from right to left, in a mirror image. This is a trait   shared by many left-handed dyslexic people. In addition to the handwriting, the   spelling errors in his manuscripts and journals demonstrated dyslexia-like   language difficulties.  
              Da Vinci overcame his learning disabilities by funneling his creative talents   into visual depictions of his thoughts. His creative, analytic, and visionary   inventiveness has not yet been matched.   | 
           
        
       
       
       
      Thomas Edison 
      
        
          
             orn in 1847,   Thomas Edison was a brilliant scientist and inventor. He was thrown out of   school when he was 12 because he was thought to be dumb. He was noted to be   terrible at mathematics, unable to focus, and had difficulty with words and   speech. It was very clear, however, that Thomas Edison was an extremely   intelligent student despite his poor performance in school.  
                In the late 1860s and early 1870s electrical science was still in its infancy   and Thomas Edison was keeping abreast of the latest developments. He was an avid   reader of the latest research of the day and frequently contributed articles   about new ideas in telegraph design to technical journals. Over the course of   his career Edison patented 1,093 inventions. Edison believed in hard work,   sometimes working twenty hours a day. He has been quoted as saying, "Genius is   one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration." 
              Hard work and perseverance helped Thomas Edison focus his keen insight and   creative abilities on the development of ingenious tools that have laid the   foundation for our modern society.   | 
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      Jay Leno 
      
        
          
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             ay Leno has   worked very hard all his life. A mild dyslexic, he did not do very well in   school getting mainly C’s and D’s. Jay, however, was determined to accomplish   his goals. Despite his poor grades, he was determined to attend Emerson College   in Boston. While told by the admissions officer that he was not a good candidate   Jay had his heart set on attending the University and sat outside the admission   officers’ office 12 hours a day 5 days a week until he was accepted into the   University.  
                Jay credits his dyslexia with enabling him to succeed in comedy. He credits   his dyslexia with helping him develop the drive and perseverance needed to   succeed in comedy, and life in general.    | 
           
        
       
       
       
      Whoopi Goldberg 
      
        
          
             hoopi Goldberg,   born Carolyn Johnson, is an outstanding American entertainer, having acted in   major motion picture hits like Ghost, Sister Act I and II, Made in America,   Jumping Jack Flash, The Color Purple, and Star Trek: Generations.  
                Whoopi had a lot of difficulty in school, but it was not until she was an   adult did she learn that she had dyslexia. When Whoopi was growing up, she   remembers being called dumb and stupid because she had a lot of problems   reading. It was clear to her teachers and family that she was neither slow nor   dumb, but had some problem that had not yet been well defined.  
              Despite her dyslexia, Whoopi Goldberg has gone on to have a successful film   and television career.   | 
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