Health

going gluten-free means removing all traces of malt, wheat, barley, and rye.

How Going Gluten-Free Transformed our Home

Hi, I’m Melissa, Beth asked me to explain how going gluten-free made a difference in our household. I have a daughter and two sons with varying degrees of dyslexia. Going gluten-free improved our family life by 80%. So how did we go gluten-free? I accidentally stumbled upon my children’s gluten problems after we’d been on holiday. When the kids were

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Drawing by Beth Beamish

How to Beat the 4 AM Anxiety Trap

It’s 4 AM and I’m going over what happened to Harry at school yesterday, wondering how best to help. My mind goes into overdrive and then other questions overwhelm me. • What will Harry do when he leaves school? • Will he ever find someone to love him? • What kind of parent will he be? • WILL I EVER

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visual problems and dyslexia

Visual problems and dyslexia – this is the connection

Researchers estimate a third of children with dyslexia suffer from eyestrain or visual problems.[1] My son, Harry, is a case in point. We had his eyesight tested on several occasions, but he always passed. In fact, he could see better than anyone else in the family. However, he still couldn’t find the next line of text when he read a book.

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The sad iceberg reflects the fact most sexual abuse of dyslexics is never reported

The link between dyslexia and sexual abuse

TRIGGER WARNING–This post contains material that may upset survivors of sexual abuse. What’s an iceberg got to do with dyslexia and sexual abuse? When I was at school, I learned we only ever see a tiny section of an iceberg; most of the ice lies deep beneath the water. The British Medical Journal in July 1991(BMJ 1991;303:143) under the heading,

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Maintaining a healthy brain is essential for a dyslexic

How to keep a healthy brain

Do you have a healthy brain? I try my best to have a healthy brain, and I’m encouraging my son, Harry, to ensure he has a healthy brain too. Youth and healthy brains When I was younger, strange though this sounds, I never gave my brain a second thought. Does any young person love their brain? Social media is awash

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Octopus

Beth Beamish

THE AUTHOR

Hi, I’m Beth. When I discovered my son had dyslexia, I had a ‘light-bulb’ moment and understood this explained many of my own difficulties. Ever since, I’ve been on a mission to discover the best ways to wrestle, what I like to call, the dyslexia octopus.

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