Dr. Metablog

Dr. Metablog is the nom de blague of Vivian de St. Vrain, the pen name of a resident of the mountain west who writes about language, books, politics, or whatever else comes to mind. Under the name Otto Onions (Oh NIGH uns), Vivian de St. Vrain is the author of “The Big Book of False Etymologies” (Oxford, 1978) and, writing as Amber Feldhammer, is editor of the classic anthology of confessional poetry, “My Underwear” (Virago, 1997).

“Geographical Dyslexia,” or “Directional Disability,” or, People Who Lose Their Way

[January 17, 2012.  There are at this moment three pages of comments appended to this entry, which I wrote almost six years ago. The comments are most interesting and revealing.  Don't miss 'em — Vivian].

In The Accidental Tourist (New York [Knopf], 1991), Anne Tyler describes a malady that, as far as I know had never before been acknowledged in literature.  All four of her eccentric Leary siblings share "a total inability to find their way around." Macon Leary, who writes travel books for a living and is the novel's focal character, christens this trait "geographical dyslexia."

I'm not convinced that "geographical dyslexia" is a good name for the Learys' condition. An alternative, "directional disability," is not much better. Whatever the name, sufferers will know what is meant.  There's a class of people (I'm one of them) who are chronically lost; who take a few steps in a strange city and can't find their way back to the hotel; who don't know how to exit the building they've just entered because they've strolled a corridor or two; who are totally befuddled and even panicked when they drive into a familiar intersection from an unaccustomed direction; who break into a cold sweat when someone says, "you know how to get home — just reverse the directions"; and who, because they're frequently lost, are subject to ridicule and mockery from their very own families and from their most intimate friends.

Macon Leary has a theory about his persistent dysgeographica. He thinks he's disabled because all his life he's moved from house to house, and "people who'd been moved around a great deal never acquired a fixed point of reference, but wandered forever in a fog." I know of no evidence to support this wholly improbable suggestion. Macon clutches at a straw because there's no data (and there's no data, at least in part, because there's no accepted name for his condition).

Every sufferer nurses his own unscientific, anecdotal theory. I was once convinced that my dysgeographica was related to my total absence of rhythm — as a child I could never learn to pump a swing or even to jump rope. My brother thinks that it must be connected to his aversion to heights. My niece takes the view that it's somehow related to her motion sickness and to her bouts of dizziness. A friend thinks that the trouble stems from the fact that she was naturally left-handed but was trained to be right-handed. In fact, no one knows whether dysgeographica is connected to any other trait, or whether it's one of a cluster of traits. In terms of hard science, the directionally disabled have been allowed to languish in the dark ages.

I'm almost convinced that dysgeographica runs in families. My father was monumentally disabled, and one of my brothers is so impaired that he's occasionally looked to me for directional advice. Barking up the wrong tree, is he!! (I have another brother who always knows exactly where he is — perhaps he's adopted.) In The Accidental Tourist,  Anne Tyler, who's a very sharp observer of mankind, tellingly attributes dysgeographica to all four Leary siblings.Tyler also notes that Macon has learned how to cope: he "kept a stack of index cards giving detailed directions to the houses of his friends — even friends he'd known forever." Coping mechanisms are essential to the dysgeographical. When I have to drive any distance without a navigator, I write the directions with a thick pen in a notebook and keep it open on the passenger seat. For some reason, I can't seem to retain more than one or two of the approaching turns in my mind, so I must continually refer to the notebook. Mapquest has proved to be a boon, especially if I remember to print out in very large type.

In The Accidental Tourist, no one pokes fun at the Leary siblings. But in real life, it's considered quite amusing to laugh at the chronically lost. People don't understand that dysgeographica is a disability like colorblindness. I can't say how many times I've been instructed to "concentrate," or "pay attention' — advice which is just as effective as commanding a color blind person to make an effort to register shades of yellow or blue. Without a label and without a support group, the dysgeographical will continue to be ridiculed. It's time for us to unite. Unless we do so, we are not only doomed, like Macon Leary, to be "adrift upon the planet, helpless, praying that by luck [we] might stumble across [our] destination," but doomed to be humiliated as well.

(July 22, 2007.  I've written again on directional dyslexia.  If anyone is interested, take a look here, here, and here.    And now one more.)  And also.

191 responses to ““Geographical Dyslexia,” or “Directional Disability,” or, People Who Lose Their Way”

  1. I have been worse at directions whether on road or inside a building. My friends would laugh at me as I would not be able to guide them to my house if I ever needed a drop off. My husband would scream at me on the road for my directionless personality if I was ever guiding him to a place of my interest. Many times he lost his patience behind the wheel, as I would FREEZE if he would ever ask me for help with directions. I was surprise how my & yr old girl who has so many other problems is so good at directions. And today I don’t know how I bumped into this thread and realized that it’s a problem and not just something that I have much control on…. I am often embarrassed because of this issue of directionlessness that I have…

  2. It was interesting reading the comments. Directional dyslexia exists on a spectrum, apparently.
    Since most people have already shared their accounts of getting lost on the road, or not being able to navigate their way around a place they’ve been to a zillion times, I thought I’d share a few other ways in which this wiring affects me/us(?):
    1) Following along in an aerobics/kickboxing/dance class, where the teacher is facing us, so opposite limbs are moving. Most of the time they’re mirroring us, but the TURNS is where I get thrown off (EVERY TIME). If they twirl clockwise, count on me doing the opposite.
    2) Tying knots. I love knots. They’re so useful in life, and when I’m watching loops being formed, my brain sort of just blacks out or can’t register which way the rope is being twisted or turned. So frustrating. I don’t seem to be able to form muscle memory for how I created twists and loops in rope, thread, etc., so it’s hard to be consistent, say if I need to create two of something symmetrically. It’s that whole mirror-image thing that eludes my brain.
    3) Can’t tell which way a garment will end up when I turn it inside out, outside in, etc. I saw that there were others in the comments who also use mnemonic devices to remember the orientation of something, but it never becomes intuitive. When I’m trying to sew, and I have to be able to picture how the fabric pieces will come together, that’s sheer torture (gotta have that seam ripper handy). I feel like my brain’s broken, and it’s frustrating that I can’t bang my head against something to remove that fuzz or static (like an old TV set, where a few bangs against the edges would restore reception).
    As many others have also shared, I’m high-functioning in other areas of my life, so as far as “handicaps” go, this is pretty mild. I can come up with workarounds for most things, but it’s tough having that low ceiling for pursuits for which greater progress is desired.

  3. I have this, too, and thought it might be an aspect of my inattentive type ADHD. It takes forever for me to form any sort of mental map. I’ve lost my car in numerous parking lots and have nightmares about not being able to get back to my locker, classroom, dorm, hotel room, etc…and I’m 34 years old with a PhD. I also wondered if it was somehow tied to mathematical ability, as I’ve always been good with quantitative analytical tasks. I do tend to “zone out” if someone else is driving or leading the way, but even putting all of my attention toward navigation doesn’t work as well as normal people perform on autopilot. It’s exhausting and embarrassing in new environments. I ask for help a lot. I also couldn’t learn dance choreography or basketball plays fast enough to keep up even putting in extra time after practice. Despite interest and physical ability I gave up and fell in love with running track.

  4. Thank you for this blog. I get lost in the ladies room trying to figure out which door is the exit. If there are two door I usually choose the wrong one
    I always thought it was just because I wasn’ really paying attention to my surroundings. Right now I am traveling in Europe and while I love exploring, I panic at the thought of getting lost in the small ally’s and twisting strets. I cope by taking cell phone photos of landmarks as I go along_like dropping breadcrumbs! I too was left handed and trained to use my right hand- also had lifelong problems with sports- never could remember which way to swing the tennis racquet. I can’t tell you how many times I was patiently taught to knit but once I take a break, can’t remember which direction Ito continue working. Same is true for sewing. I am an artist and love travel- and can count on getting lost everyday-thankfully, there are so many people willing to help!

  5. Denise E. Reddick Avatar
    Denise E. Reddick

    I thought I was the only with “dysgeographia”, that is other than my father, uncle and son.
    I thought I was rather clever at hiding this condition from others until I was re-certifying for BLS and one of the doctors yelled out, “Hey Dolly I didn’t know you were left handed” (I’m R-hand dominate). After thirty something years of doing CPR how did I come up with this? Oh well, it’s been effective (sometimes).
    As everyone else has mentioned at times it can be amusing(?)but it can quickly turn to panic and further confusion in certain situations.

  6. Carolyn Barcus Avatar

    I have always known I had “Dyslexia of Direction” because my optometrist explained it to me more than 40 years ago. I once was on North High street unable to find South High Street! But have successfully navigated solo motorcycle trips cross country–I always reviewed maps at rest stops. Reviewing written directions is not helpful; I really need to see the layout of the roads on the map.
    However, on a couple of trips to Great Britain, I was able to easily find my way around, even on my second trip to find the same little B&B I had stayed at ten years earlier, and to find a short-cut out of a castle from the third floor great hall. Surprisingly, I was never lost in GB.

  7. I remember driving home from work one day, and my phone ran out of battery, and I couldn’the use it as a GPS. And yes, I still need a GPS to get from work, even though I go there all the time. I’ve actually almost gotten into legal trouble because of this. A cop that pulled me over for some traffic infraction found it suspicious that I was using my GPS to get from work. He thought I was lying to him.
    It took me over an hour and a half to get home when I live only 15 minutes from work. I kept driving in circles. I would often not realize I was going the wrong direction until I passed a sign saying I was entering a completely different city.
    I have many other problems as well. For example, I still don’t remember the way to my old high school.

  8. Thank you. Just, thank you.

  9. Thank you for this comforting, and hysterically funny blog. I have often said to myself, Kathy, you couldnt find your way out of a paper bag…and how many times did I turn right to enter the bathroom at Walmart, and failed to reverse that coming you and walked into a wall. It certainly does make life interesting. I read where this can is associated with spacial dyslexia, and would explain why I had such a hard time learning to drive. Judging distances is very difficult, and where I am suppose to be on the road. There is much more to this, everyone should do a through research to understand this dysfunction. And yes, thank you, just thank you! Kathy

  10. Great thread. I’m 42 year old woman, with a law degree and I’ve always had this same, mysterious and remarkable lack of geographical orientation even in finding my home of 20 years. This despite my family members, by and large, having extraordinary ability to know where they are in relation to where they want to be (even the first time they visit a new city. Graduated first in my class undergrad, with a full ride to law school but I had great trouble learning left from right (I don’t know actually know my right from my left without “cheating” and pretending I’m going to write because I know I’m right handed, and I know which hand holds the pen if I think about it), and I struggled to tell time, learning to tie my shoes, finding compass points, graphing slope, etc. My late Grandfather, an Colonel in the USAF, and fighter pilot in WW2 was fascinated with my problem, and spent a whole summer testing my geographical deficits. He confided one day that he wish he had known that this- whatever it is- is a real condition because as a pilot, when he trained new pilots, and later trained cadets at a large college, he assumed men who seemed unable to orient themselves were shirkers or idiots- and because Grandpa knew I was intelligent, but so completely lacking any geographical orientation in any surroundings, he felt terrible for those men- I imagine they were shunted to some undesirable duty, but realistically, despite 20-10 vision, I could never see myself being able to pilot or navigate a plane with this problem so probably best those lost men weren’t dropping bombs from above. When I was 20, I once tried following phone directions to a meeting at my bosses’ home about 45 minutes away, and I ended up in the wrong state, three hours away. My first husband was actually very understanding and helpful about my problem, and he was a police detective, and I know he told all the dispatchers that if I called, I’m probably lost, and unable to find my way home, and he asked them to dispatch a radio car for me to follow, which, God Bless them, they did, on more than one occasion. I’m hoping GPS continues to improve because I lack the ability to know when it is sending me the wrong way. I always keep my gas tank full, and phone charged in preparation for getting lost. So long as you don’t panic in getting lost, you’ll get home. If you panic, then it’s easy to compound the problem and have an accident.
    In any case, we’ve all learned coping techniques, and anxiously await the day medical science can explain what this condition is and why we have it. It would be nice to know how many of us there are….

  11. The idea of “switching the directions around in my head” sends me into a bit of a panic. My brain simply isn’t capable of doing it. I’m pretty sure my “directional dyslexia,” as I’ve referred to it most of my adult life, also relates to an inability to see spatial layouts in my head. For example, I can’t visualize how I’d like a room decorated or a poster laid out. I have to physically lay things out or sketch them and then make changes until it looks right. I’m not a fan of jigsaw puzzles either, and I think that’s related.

  12. I’d also like to add that, unlike some websites that like to lump this in with directional dyslexia, I have never had problems differentiating left from right.
    Some sufferers of “directional/geographical dyslexia” have mentioned that they never recall their dreams. I’m wondering if anyone else has this because I do. I only remember one or two dreams a year, if that.

  13. I was a truck driver for 25 yrs.traveling all over the US. I had an almost super sense of direction. Never lost my sense of direction, during all those years..
    In 1989 I moved my family about 90 miles north of my home town to a 12 acre home place.Since day one on this property I’ve lost my sense of north, south, east, west.
    I can’n find nothing about this online, I thought I’d post in case someone else has experienced anything like this?

  14. I believe I’ve been suffering with Directional Dyslexia as long as I can remember. How can I find help?

  15. I loved reading everyone’s comments. This is such an embarrassing malady and I get laughed at a lot, or assumed that I must be an idiot. I’m very intelligent except in this one area. Can tell my left from right but literally have entered my home address into GPS while sitting in front of my house in the dark. I get lost in bathrooms as well. I must look like I’m on drugs sometimes. I also worked as a dialysis nurse for a year and trying to set up the intricate dialysis machines, was problematic because of this. I’d love to read studies on this disorder. I had difficulty learning to tell time, and did get some letters and numbers backwards, but I’m an award-winning novelist who loves to read and has no real difficulty with words. Just geography and things like time zone conversions (oy vey on that one). Thanks to everyone who shared their stories!

  16. I feel so relieved that I am not alone in this. I can’t forget this scenario when I was in college and we are playing like a dance revo game where there are arrows (up, down, right, left) on the floor and you will just follow/step on what was displayed on the screen. And I am confused why do I step on exactly the opposite way and I get lost in the middle of the game. I felt so stupid and I was traumatized. And also when someone says left or right, it takes for like 3-5 seconds for me to distinguish which is which. I always feel stupid and I thought I am dumb because I can’t understand my situation back then. And also I get lost all the time. when I go to the bathroom for example in a mall, and then when I need to come out and come back to where my companions are, I have no clue which way to turn, it’s really frustrating for me. Then one day I learned the term dyslexia. It’s like the condition of a person reading something in reversed. And i correlated it with my condition with directions then researched about it. And there’s a term directional dyslexia or dysorienta. which is also the result of weak short term memory which I exactly have. I tend to forget things easily and it is very difficult for me to store long term memory. I felt relieved because from that day I will not label myself as stupid or dumb anymore.

  17. Is there a support group for directional dyslexia patients? or anyone i could talk to I felt like I was the only one in the world that had these problems till read this thread.
    thanks

  18. I’ve always referred to it as “geographically challenged” when trying to explain to my friends and family why I need the address when it’s on the same road that I live on. It’s nice to know that this is a real thing. My first day of middle school I was looking down at the map and I ran into a Pole. As a young child I would get lost in big houses. My father was a marine and we once spent 9 hours learning how to read the hands on a clock. I can drive, with a map not a paper map Google maps. I was born in Florida and it only took me 18 years to learn the roads in my town. I was just learning north,east,south and west when I moved to indiana for work. The seasons make it more challenging. Everything looks different in the winter. I don’t remember my dreams and I have a bad short term memory. Any cure?

  19. What a relief to find this site. I have so many stories, and so much of what people have said here is true of me. I worked in a small conference center twice a month (for 3 days at a time) for several years and EVERY time i left the room to go to the restroom i turned the wrong way (BTW my nickname is ‘Wrong Way’)
    Someone mentioned NYC – I’ve been living here for 30 years and most times i get out of the subway i head in the wrong way. I also can’t reverse direction. When I need directions – traveling on my own (before GPS) I always ask for ‘directions for dummies’ – that’s how specific they need to be. Fortunately has an amazing sense of place. Years ago my husband joked he should put R /L on my hands.
    I’m 65. I own a successful business; have done well professionally. But I began to worry that this was the beginning of early Alzheimer’s, or dementia. Today, when I once again took the wrong direction I thot I better google and see if I could find info.
    Thanks to all who commented here. It was so helpful!

  20. I was told by an Occupational Therapist yrs ago that I had “spatial dyslexia” pertaining to my complete absence of sense of direction. It was so comforting to find more information on this subject. My husband now realizes this is an actual condition, and I can’t just suddenly obtain a sense of direction. I drive & he navigates. In any choice of 2 directions, I will always choose the wrong one. Can’t do puzzles, chess, backgammon, etc. I have a degree in business, one in nutrition, and a master’s degree in nutrition and institutional administration. I’m an intelligent person with this awful problem! At least now I know it is a recognized, scientific problem with specific limitations.

  21. I feel your pain!
    I’ve described my problem as “directional dyslexia” for years, without realising it’s becoming slowly recognised as a genuine entity.
    My Mum’s speech, in rhyme, at my wedding: “3rd of March, at 4.15/ born by Caesaerean Section/ Trying to enter the world knees first/ says much for her sense of direction!” Much (good natured) laughter all round.
    I initially dismissed that I had a “left/right” problem, because I wouldn’t describe myself as having a problem there. Yet EVERY time I have to think which is left or right, I pinch my finger and thumb together as if writing and work it out that way – it’s just so quick that I’d forgotten it used to be a problem when I was quite small.
    My husband is a neurologist, and did a masters in neuropsych. He practiced his neuropsych tests on me, and, being a pretty bright, professional woman, I was in the top 5% band for almost all areas, except testing short term memory of complex sequencing.
    Trying those tests was such a bizarre feeling – I described it as like suddenly developing a funnel shaped sink hole in my thought processes, and I could almost physically feel the thoughts slipping away down into it like sand.
    My usual approach to not being able to do something is to work really hard at it, until I can. I’ve got pretty good at finding my way around, for short distances, on foot, but I don’t think I do it in the same way as other people. I deliberately note landmarks, and mentally picture the route in several different ways. It helps that walking means I have the time to use these strategies, but I am more likely to bump into people whilst doing it though – it uses too much cognitive horse power.
    With a car, I’m still terrible. It will probably take me 20 times to learn a route to work, and I can still take a wrong turn and get lost if I’m distracted.
    Other forms of spatial awareness, like manipulating complex shapes, and picturing the course of a vein as I insert a long line (I’m a doctor!) are not a problem at all. The trick with the mirrors you sometimes see in science museums, where you have to move an object along a complex course when you can only see mirror images of your hands – I’m BRILLIANT at that! I wonder if that’s part of lifelong compensation for a lack of instinctive knowledge of left and right?
    I have a couple of other areas that might ally with this, that are somethimes associated with dyspraxia and dyslexia – clumsiness in crowds, distractability, and naturally poor organisational skills – but I worked at this so hard, with lists and tick boxes, that I perform above average at work.
    It’s nice to hear from other people in the same boat. You’re not alone, and somehow, knowing that this can be a genuine cognitive disabilty, makes it less embarrassing. As someone else said, no-one expects a colour blind person to be embarrassed when they can’t distinguish crimson from scarlet!
    We’re lucky we live in the era of sat-nav. Other things I’ve found that have really helped are developing little strategies to pass off the work of remembering where you’re going into a different brain area. Reciting directions aloud like a poem, commenting out loud on what can be seen out of the car whilst driving along (helps when you have small kids in the car), taking mental pictures of everything around you. I might not be able to recall a complex stream of abstract instructions, but I can learn a poem easily, or remember that there is a beautiful meadow with weird sheep that look a bit like pigs in the field near my house.
    I’ve also, on occasion, written directions down when I’ve had to ask for them – it’s amazing how pleasant and patient most people are when you cheerfully tell them “I’ve got directional dyslexia; I’ll forget this after the second instruction if I don’t write it down!” I think it also makes people more careful in the directions they give you.
    Despite all the coping strategies though, sometimes having a label can make you feel more normal rather than less!

  22. I have always known it was a real condition – I knew I wasn’t stupid- but that was often how it made me feel, that plus panicked.I am spatially aware, can figure 3 dimensional objects, worked successfully as a Mechanical Engineer for 40+ years, know my left from right, can read maps and in all other respects seem to be “normal” but somewhat absent minded. I have no sense of time either nor any real sense of place. I live in a sort of isolated geographic bubble isolated from other places and where time doesn’t really exist. I can work round this and with prompts, lists etc can manage to get along. I panic when keeping an appointment. I inevitably set of much, much to soon and panic my way to the meeting/show or whatever only to get there far,far too early and well before anyone else arrives and then panic that I have got the wrong place or the wrong date or the wrong time.
    My problem is really connecting up things to make sense of them. I can remember fine detail about a small part of a walk I have done but as an isolated detail. I will often remember several bits of different walks and be convinced that they were in fact a single hike. Same with driving.
    My wife has a wonderful sense of direction (fortunately) but there a couple of noteworthy observations.
    Inside building I am much better at navigating than she is. Hotels, Airports etc are no problem for me but outside I am hopeless. Shopping Malls however get classed as outside and once in I can rarely find my way out again. Like many of you I almost inevitably turn the wrong way, very often 180 degrees out – but not consistently enough to rely on this error!
    We live in the UK but once spent almost 6 months in South Africa- Southern Hemisphere – and suddenly I was the one who had a sense of direction while my wife experienced my normal condition for the first time in her life. I somehow knew North, South etc and which way to turn. Weird! Maybe I have got a Southern Hemisphere brain in a Northern Hemisphere head!
    I am not sure that sharing with others will help me at all but maybe you might recognise some of the symptoms

  23. Thank God for this! I finally discovered that I am not an idiot. I work at a very complex electrical job. I never have problems with my actual work, but I often hear “I sent him to get a part next door, and he has been gone a half hour”. ” He is screwing off”. “That new guy is an idiot, can’t find his ass with both hands” etc. I just moved to a new city, and I have to rely on my phone GPS to get home, even after 50 times. I use all the mentioned aids, making notes etc. I have a pilot’s license, and no difficulty with flying at all, but I can get lost trying to park. The parking lot at Walmart can bring me to tears. I am going to bring it up at with my doctor.

  24. Wow what a great and comforting website. I have had directional dyslexia my entire life (inherited from my father apparently though I didn’t realize this until we took a trip together after i was an adult)
    I also had no clue what it was called until 15 or more years ago when I was explaining to someone that I needed to write down the directions both to and from her house and she said “Oh I have directional dyslexia too – I completely understand.” Until then my family just laughed at my “spacy” directionally challenged thing. Every time I’d walk out of a restaurant or movie theater, etc. I would begin striding confidently in the wrong direction. My husband learned to just wait a minute before asking where I was going or to just say nothing until I figured out he wasn’t with me. My granddaughter now struggles with several learning disabilities and I realize that she is also dyslexic in this way. Like nearly everyone else has mentioned, I have college degrees and have had a successful career. However many people have not heard of this “disability” which is what drove me to the internet today after trying to explain it to the Director of a Chorus I have sung with for several years. I was alway comfortable standing near the middle of the chorus on the middle level on the risers. When she moved me to the end of one of the rows today, I suddenly became disoriented and even felt a little dizzy. Spatial disorientation. Really appreciate this site!

  25. I jokingly say I have a gift for getting lost. But as you all know, it’s no joke. Thank you for giving it a real name, and for letting me know I am not alone.

  26. It’s about that time I have to go see my doctor for a physical and I was debating whether I should tell her about this problem that I have because I am embarrassed. I have always been made fun of by my brother and dad (both of whom have very good sense of direction) for not knowing how to get somewhere even though I have been there multiple times. I get so anxious when I’m approaching an intersection and I have no picture in my brain of where I’m going, where I’m turning, how far away I am and rely only on my passengers direction again usually my dad and brother. Sometimes my dad purposely won’t tell me directions because he expects me to know it but I don’t think he understands that I am not faking it when I say okay I’ll drive us there but I have no idea where to go and how to get there. For some time I avoided looking up whether this is normal because I feared getting being faced with a diagnosis that doesn’t suite me like autism. And in no way do I mean that in a wrong way but I consider myself very intelligent, motivated and I don’t struggle with remembering anything else but directions so it has been confusing this whole time. I’m very happy that I’m not alone and you best believe I read all of you guys stories and I feel relieved that this is “normal” to some extend… except for the embarrassment that we will have to deal with for the rest of our lives

  27. There is something called developmental topographical disorientation. For many years researchers in Canada have been offering a forum for people to communicate with other people who have this problem, and to find out about the research being done. Check out the website at https://forum.gettinglost.ca/topic/624/past-and-future-of-dtd

  28. I am 17 years old and all my life I have suffered these issues. With the exception of having problems recognizing left and right I can relate to each and every thing mentioned here. I will be getting my learner’s permit soon and honestly, few things scare me more.
    Thank you for putting this out there. I always thought I was the only one. It’s comforting to know that I’m not the only one facing this.

  29. I am going to show my husband all of these comments. He gets to frustrated that I can’t figure out what way to turn at an intersection we have been at before, because this time I we are coming at it from a different direction.
    It takes me about 7-8 times of traveling a route until I know the route well enough to not need help. GPS can be helpful, but is not a cure all. I will second guess the instructions and turn too early, then panic while the GPS is trying to reroute, but is not fast enough for me not to have traveled too far in the wrong direction, causing me to be late.
    When I have to drive someplace new, and it is very important that I get there on time, I leave early. Sometimes I travel the route the day before and always have on my GPS; my best strategy is to use street view on Google Maps to make notes before I start my trip. I will look at the directions on Google Maps and then for each turn, I place the yellow small man on the street at the turn so that I enter street view. Then I can write down note like, “when turning right on NE 57th, you will pass an Arco on the right hand side. The turn is shorty after that gas station. If you see a Wendy’s then you have missed the turn and gone too far.” I do this for each change in a route i.e. any turn. This helps tremendously. I know many of you use tricks for driving, but if you have not tried this one, I hope it may be of use to someone.
    It is not just right and left and North, South, East and West that I struggle with. I have problems with number sequences, such as the Dewey Decimal system. I am a Librarian and have been upfront about my directional dyslexia, careful to explain that this effects not just directions. I can not be counted on to correctly shelve books, for suddenly 104.367 is right next to 104. 673.
    If someone spells a word out loud, I have a hard time writing the word down. It takes me a few seconds longer to translate the verbal sound of a letter into a letter and the person will invariable go too fast for me to get the letters all down correctly. I also have problems with turning keys in locks and turning the faucet the right direction for the desired temperature. When tired or stressed, I confuse p, b, and d. Calendar dates are a struggle too. I will write down the wrong date, even the wrong year at times, while the voice in my head is saying the correct date. When reading it back to myself I won’t see the mistake, I just read it as I think I have written it down.
    I am a voracious reader and can write fairly well. I assume I write better than the average person, but not better than those with the same level of education that I have attained. I struggle with grammar, but thankfully their are many tools for that.
    I too find it comforting to know I am not alone in this. One of the saddest parts of having directional dyslexia is friends and family who do not believe you and think that you are just not trying hard enough. That if you just “take a mental snap shot” of each turn, you should be able to remember it the next time. It just takes repetition for me to really remember a route.
    I love cities that are laid out like a grid. I lived in downtown Portland Oregon for years and loved that Burnside separated South from North and the Willamette River separated East form West. I could always tell if I was in one quadrant and have a good general sense of the direction I needed to travel in to get to another quadrant. Thank you to the city planners of Portland!
    As far as cause, I know that premature babies who are born a month or more premature are at an increased risk for dyslexia. Spatial awareness and sequencing may develop in that last stages of fetal development. I was born 1 month and 1 day earlier than was expected. I think that may have something to do with the “why” of my condition. Yet, many of the commenters here talk about this being a family trait. I am sure that is true too. It may be that those with a family history of dyslexia, of any form, are more likely to develop the deficit and the odds are even higher if you are exposed to an early in utero trauma like premature birth or emergency, high stress birth. My Mom had hyperemisis, 9 month long morning sickness that is present all day, throughout her pregnancy with me, which must have introduced stress hormones , Cortisal?, in the uterine environment. I wish there were more studies on the effects of stress and trauma in utero, how hormones effect dyslexia in utero and the genetic component of dyslexia of all forms.
    Thank you for writing about this very real mental deficit.

  30. Frances J Kinney Avatar

    I found your site several years ago and it was a comfort to me All my life I have had this issue. Even as a little child I would get lost on my block! Or going two blocks to buy bread! etc. I lived in Alaska for half my life and fortunately, we didn’t have too many roads for me to get lost on when driving! I would drive hundreds of times to the same place and I would still get disorientated. Now living at the bottom of a mountain range in rural Arizona this is still an issue. I try using visual cues like a certain mountain range to drive to but it will always be an issue. I had a great successful professional career, leadership roles even in my retirement but I still get very frustrated with myself going places even food shopping, doctor’s appointments, etc. when I get turned around. I try to be more forgiving of myself and just leave plenty early when I have to go somewhere. I love GPS voice directions. Oh, I might mention that although all my family knew of my directional “issues” they also would comment that I have exceptional hearing. I know that’s true because often I must block out conversations I can hear going on around me and I always had the ability to hear the proper pitch in music. I often wondered if all of that was related. Hopefully your friends and family will be more tolerant of our issue and that we try to less frustrated with ourselves.

  31. In my family we have always said that my mother and I are directionally challenged. I am constantly getting lost if I don’t have a picture in my mind of an intersection I am supposed to turn at or god forbid they change my mental marker that signals me that is where I need to turn. GPS has been a lifesaver I only drove a little while without a GPS I still will get lost and turn the wrong way but it is less frequent.

  32. Jennifer Davies Avatar
    Jennifer Davies

    I too have suffered being directionally challenged all my life. I rarely leave the house for fear of getting lost. I have my one set way of getting to and from places. I have always had sensory processing issues though and after my 3yo was diagnosed with autism I have realized I too am autistic. I have extreme car sickness due to vestibular issues so I was drugged quite a bit as a young baby and child so not sure if I was unable to develop directional awareness or if I have poor spacial awareness due to my vestibular discrimination disorder. Hoping more research is done. My son is a vestibular seeker unlike me and even though he is 3yo helps get me home when we go on walks around the neighborhood. So glad he did not get my terrible sense of direction.

  33. I am sure this has been my problem for most of my adult life. The most frustrating thing is that people think you’re stupid or just make excuses when you’re asked by friends to all meet up somewhere and you either have to miss out on the fun because you are afraid you will get lost or ask if someone could pick you up. I can understand them getting frustrated with you asking, that’s why I would just bow out of activities. This has been such a handicap for me. If there is a book out there or a group that is or has formed, I would love to know.

  34. My older brother just introduced me to all this information & I thank him for this! I can truly relate to all your comments and now feel that I wasn’t a complete idiot whenever I couldn’t find my way and can’t follow a sequence of directions! Thank goodness I have my phone & GPS for guidance!

  35. All my life I thought of myself as being different from other people, because orientation has always been a very difficult task for me. For many years I thought that I didn’t pay attention to the routes and landmarks, just like my family and friends kept telling me. But deep inside I knew it had to be far worse than that. I’m now in my late sixties, and only recently did I begin to wonder if this could be a special condition, something in the brain, and if there were others like me. That’s how I found your comments. I share almost all of your problems. I use my right hand for certain tasks (writing, throwing, ironing) and my left hand for others (sewing, cutting with scissors or knives, washing the dishes…). Someone wrote in other forum: “Even with well rehearsed long journeys, I seem unable to ‘hold’ the entire journey in my head. I experience what can only be described as a series of ‘sequences’ which, in the correct order, ‘become revealed’ as I progress through the journey.” I could have written these same words, because this is exactly how I feel. Big shopping malls are places to avoid… giving directions to other people is impossible, even in my own neighborhood. I drove only during a period of 8 years, when driving to and from work became absolutely indispensable, but I had to rehearse the journey many times… I memorized the journey from point A to point B, and back… and that was all. When the road happened to be closed due to road repair works or accidents, I carefully drove to the nearest place where I could safely park, and called for help. Now I don’t drive anymore. Someone that is always in panic when within a car can be a very dangerous driver… I am, like all of you, a very normal person: always a very good student (I have a PhD), a long and successful career, great family and social life – but I can’t be as independent as I would like to be, because I am always afraid of getting lost. It’s frustrating! The good thing is that, if this is something that affects not only me but a lot of people, perhaps it will get the attention of the scientific community… Ana Figueira, Lisboa, Portugal

  36. Thanks for the text. I am dyslexic too.Its comforting to realize that there others in a similar situation like me. Julius.

  37. Well… it feels good to be home!! I always believed I had some un-named condition and that there had to be someone else on the planet with the same problem. I am so glad to meet you all. You have described me perfectly. Very intelligent, three college degrees, magna cum laude graduate, Family Nurse Practitioner, fantastic career and at the same time I have often felt “retarded” because of not being able to find my way home. I have always felt like my brain was in backwards or turned inside out because I always seemed to perceive my surroundings as though I was viewing everything in a mirror and everything was on the opposite side. Getting lost a million times, stepping off the same elevator on the floor; often feeling like someone had blindfolded me, put me in the center of a room, spun me around several times then uncovered my eyes leaving me in a total state of confusion and disorientation. In my world, there is no left or right, north or south, east or west. I even got “LOST” on the train after going straight ahead to the dining car but could not find my way back to my seat!! I actually had to draw a map to help me find my seat. Frustrating beyond imagination! I’m so glad God gave me a heart, because that is the ONLY way I can tell my left from my right. The one good way this disability has served me is in performing physical examinations on patients because when facing them, their left side is to my right!! In my world, that is exactly where it should be, in fact everything should be on the opposite side! One of my most embarrassing moments was leaving a relative’s house and them giving me directions on how to get back to the highway. They had no idea, that I was paying no attention to what they were saying because I was trying to figure out how to back out of their driveway and whether I should go left or right. Just so embarrassing. All it takes is one wrong turn, and I am totally lost and confused, whether I am driving or walking. I am now 74 years old. I have learned to be patient with myself and resist the urge to panic because I know that eventually I will find my way. It feels so good to be in this community of kindred sufferers.

  38. Wow this is so great! My geographical dyslexia isn’t as terrible as some people’s in the comments, but I do have to think hard and visualise all the routes out of my (relatively small) hometown that I’ve lived in on and off for 42 years, in order to remember how to get to any of the next towns over. I get lost and disoriented easily and will often take the wrong direction out of a shop or somewhere. It once took me 20 minutes of wandering around a large shopping precinct in order to find the right underground parking lot, and then another 10 to find my car (even though I deliberately always take pictures of the nearby signs that identify the different areas). I have no idea how I managed to get to work before GPS, especially since I work in constantly changing locations. I know I used to memorise the directions and road names line by line every night, thank goodness I don’t have to do that any more! I can read maps ok but have great difficulty translating them into the real world around me – it’s a bit easier if I spin the map round so that it’s facing the same direction I am. Like many others here, I’m pretty intelligent – I qualified for MENSA in the top 1 percentile. My job actually demands excellent spatial awareness, in terms of relating the positions of objects to each other. One thing I am terrible at though is estimating distances or measurements, e.g. I cannot estimate the size of a room, for example. Another thing I think might be related is that, although I have an excellent memory for facts and rote learning (I still remember many poems I memorised in school, and can recite the opening of The Aeneid in Latin and English, because I once had to read it at Speech Day), I have an appalling memory of my own life. I retain very few childhood memories. I can watch a tv show and the next week I will have barely any recollection of what happened until I rewatch it, which triggers the memory. I watched a Christmas film with a massive surprise twist one year, and the next year watched it again and was completely floored by the same twist (which I do now recall). My boyfriend thought it was hilarious and unbelievable that I could have forgotten it. My mind was blown by one commenter’s suggestion that it could be connected to premature birth of a month or more, and pregnancy stress hormones. I was 12 weeks premature, and my mum had previously had part of her cervix removed which lead to an earlier miscarriage and an injunction from her doctor to bed rest as much as possible, so I’m sure her cortisol levels were through the roof. I also tried to come out chin first, had jaundice and a hole in my heart, was in an incubator for several weeks and in hospital for nearly 3 months, so pretty traumatic although obviously I have no memory of it. My parents have always expressed surprise that my cognitive abilities were not at all impaired, but perhaps they were after all! Thanks for everyone’s comments, so interesting!

  39. Entah sudah berapa banyak, saya sering tersesat bahkan untuk jalur yang telah saya lalui atau sering saya lalui. Terkadang saya merasa frustasi dan takut untuk pergi ke tempat baru seorang diri. Tak jarang saya di olok, dan merasa malu dengan teman teman saya. Saya juga tidak mengerti mengapa saya begitu kesulitan untuk menentukan arah, seperti di persimpangan. Saya pernah mengunjungi sebuah bioskop bersama teman, tempat nya tidak terlalu besar. Tapi, saat berkunjung kembali seorang diri, saya tersesat. Senang sekali saya menemukan blog ini dan membaca komentar kalian, bahwa ternyata saya tidak sendiri. Terimakasih telah berbagi pengalaman dan tips nya.

  40. Me and my sister both have this. We have theorized it was caused by lead pipes in our childhood home. Though that may just be us looking for an explanation and be unrelated. It’s incredibly hard to explain to people, but I think comparing it to color blindness is accurate. In my mind left and right do not exist. No amount of concentration will change that, I just have to cope as best I can.

  41. My geography teacher said as I went to take the exam ‘good luck – try and get the map the right way up’. I have never understood how a squiggle on a map or sat nav is supposed to represent the road I’m on or want. I am also profoundly deaf so cannot lip-read what a sat nav might be saying. So unfortunately sat nav’s are useless for me.
    I’m struggling to ‘prove’ the cannot plan our follow a journey part of my disability claim. Doctors are not listening and just say deafness isn’t a reason. I agree with that but they are not listening to why it is so hard to go anywhere without someone with me. If one of the few routes I can do has a diversion I am lost. I cannot travel to hospital alone as I would never get there. All doctors are interested in are the issues they know of – yet there has never been any reason to discuss my inability to understand a route unless I repeat it countless times to somehow ‘fix’ it in my head. Even then there’s missing sections I cannot recall but on reaching that point when driving I know it.
    I know my left from my right, don’t get lost at home, but will in a hospital or other building. I never know what direction I am facing or where to go. I cannot attend family occasions as I simply have no ability to store what counties, towns, roads to use in what order, to get there.
    If anyone can advise how to get help in the UK I should be immensely grateful.

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