Finally, A Treatment Plan For Dyslexics Thats Not Just A Band-Aid For Their Symptoms: An Interview With Ron Davis

Published: July 27, 2012, 7:26 p.m.

The average person reads by "thinking in sounds" at a pace of about 2-8 words per second. The average dyslexic doesn\u2019t think in sounds.\n\nThey think by picturing images at a rate of 32 images per second! Because they think at this much faster pace, when they come across a word they don\u2019t have an image for (like "the" or "and"), they stumble into a state of disorientation that we see as "dyslexia" (mixing letters, seeing things backwards, etc.).\n\nBut fortunately there is help. Ron Davis, author of The Gift Of Dyslexia and a dyslexic himself, says dyslexics are just highly creative people who think differently than most. So we can\u2019t expect traditional methods for reading to work for them. And in this audio, you\u2019ll hear the revolutionary approach that does work.\n\nWell-meaning parents, teachers and friends of dyslexics may unknowingly be making their loved ones\u2019 problems worse. But if you know the facts and the triggers, you can put an action plan in place that will actually work for dyslexics of every age. And in this audio, you\u2019ll hear how to do that.\n \nThis is an exclusive interview from Michael Senoff's www.hardtofindseminars.com.