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Friday, September 9, 2011

The Gifts We Have--Part 2

Today, we welcome Staci Stallings again to share more of her story about how she dealt with her son's dyslexia. You might want a tissue as you see the struggle of a little boy who is trying hard, but doesn't have the same tools as the other kids in his class. But with a mother's love ... and determination, they are able to pinpoint problems, and with God's guidance, find solutions.

The Gifts We Have...
Part 2
True to my nature to learn everything I can about a problem I'm facing, I ordered books on dyslexia and devoured them.  We got the first part of the Barton Solution program and started work.  There was an almost immediate change.  For instance, my son had not seen before that words are made of different combinations of letters.  To him, every word was unique and had to be learned or memorized as a unit.  He would, for example, see bag and translate that to:  starts with b, little letter, long letter.  Then file it in the little Rolodex of memorized words in his mind.

That worked until we hit beg.  When it wasn't bag, he would start guessing, based on what the picture looked like or what the sentence clues were.  Until we hit bog... then boy.  His "reading" would sound like this.  "We went to the bag..."  "No, look at that letter.  It's an o."  "Oh, beg."  "No, hon, look it's an o..."  "Oh, boy..."  It was incredibly frustrating! Talk about falling on God's patience because mine was shot.  That's about all I did!

I remember that first night after I figured out it was dyslexia.  I was laying in bed with him praying, before putting him to sleep.  I said, "So, reading's kind of hard, huh?"  He said, "Yeah" in the most defeated voice I'd ever heard. (I had always known if we let this thing get too big of a hold, it would affect what he thought of himself.  That night, I knew it already had.)  I said, "So the other kids at school, they can read?"  He said, "Yeah, they brag a lot."  "Brag a lot?  What do you mean?"  He said, "They say, 'I can read this.  I can read that.'"  My heart was nearly breaking for how sad he sounded.  I said, "And you can't?"  He said, "No."

I laid there for a few moments and then I said, "So when you read, do you guess a lot?"  He looked at me really puzzled and said, "Mom, that's all reading is, is a lot of guessing."  

That was a "take a breath and realize you were doing all you knew to do" moment, but wow.  It was the first time I really "got" how much he was struggling!  And yet, he hadn't given up.  My respect for that little boy, and all who suffer in silence with this, increased exponentially in that moment.  I had read with him for over 50 hours at that point, and I had no idea he was literally trying to guess at nearly every word!

After the first few Barton lessons, he finally grasped the concept that each letter made a sound and you put them altogether to make a word.  What a breakthrough!  One night in bed, we were reading comic strips.  He had to find three words that he knew.  He found the number 3.  I said, "3 is not a word."  He said, "Th  r  ee.  Yes, it is!"  I was so happy, I could have cried!

So we bounced along, working through the Barton System until we got back into school for second grade. The homework amount was unbelievable, and we had to ditch most of our reading work just to get the homework done each night.  Thankfully, he wasn't having trouble with math (except word problems), but spelling was a mountain almost too high to climb that first semester.  After a LOT of work, we got the first six weeks report card home.  He'd gotten an 83 in Language Arts.  He was in tutoring for reading.  We'd taken him out of Spanish because he just couldn't handle that too, and his learning was sporadic at best.  Each Friday of the spelling tests was a gauntlet, it might go good, and it might be a disaster.  You just could never tell because he was still guessing at so much.
Then came the turn-around that would change everything...

 ***
Check out Part 3 next Friday as Staci tells us about the therapy that ushered in the breakthroughs her son so desperately needed.
 
A stay-at-home mom with a husband, three kids and a writing addiction on the side, Staci Stallings has numerous titles for readers to choose from.  Not content to stay in one genre and write it to death, Staci’s stories run the gamut from young adult to adult, from motivational and inspirational to full-out Christian and back again.  Every title is a new adventure!  That’s what keeps Staci writing and you reading.  Although she lives in Amarillo, Texas and her main career right now is her family, Staci touches the lives of people across the globe every week with her various Internet endeavors including:
Spirit Light Moments -- One moment with God each day

Facebook Author Page at:

Search Staci's Books:

Spirit Light Books--The Blog
  http://spiritlightbooks.wordpress.com/


Or...

Follow Staci on Twitter @StaciStallings

Come on over for a visit…

You’ll feel better for the experience!

2 comments:

  1. I cannot wait until next friday! It is just too long:-) Thank you for this story.

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  2. Thanks for the post. We have dyslexia in our family, too. How wonderful your child is making good progress! I have a dyslexic character in my first MS set in colonial times. Kelly Marie Long has a wonderful Amish story with a dyslexic hero.

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