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’m glad I’ve read this as I have a friend with this disability, and until now, I’d always thought she was stupid.
    I once gave her directions somewhere starting from her own flat. “Go North up the High Street.” “Which way is North?” I was stupefied.
    For me it is impossible not to know which way is North. On the rare occasions when I don’t know which way I’m facing I feel confused and panicky (or disoriented) until I can get hold of a map or streetplan and work it out.
    So I find living with directional disability very hard to imagine. The most remarkable thing about my directionally disabled friend is that she seems to get by absolutely fine. In fact now she has ‘sat-nav’ she has no problem at all.

  2. I have lived lost for 41 years. What a great feeling to finally have a post about directional dyslexia and kinesthetic sense! I will definately read the Accidental Tourist

  3. I have had this all of my life, though no one except family and close friends, are the wiser.
    It gives cold comfort to know it has a name — directional dyslexia, dysgeographica. Warmer comfort is the knowledge maybe I am not really the most spatially disoriented person in the whole world.

  4. I am 61 years old and several years ago I read in Reader’s Digest that there was something called Directional Dyslexia. For me, it was wonderful to hear that there was really something wrong with me and that it had a NAME!!!! I have been lost all of my life. I have a strong desire to always go the wrong way, I even got lost in a parking garage once. Driving somewhere unfamiliar is the most stressful thing I do. Mapquest has helped. Never tell me North or South – it makes no sense to me at all. I am glad I found this site and know that I am not alone.

  5. darylle racimo Avatar
    darylle racimo

    I’m 27 years old and until now I’m still afraid to drive because am afraid to get lost. My husband gets mad at me when teaching me to drive because I always forget where to go.In addition to that,I also get nervous and become confuse of the steering wheel,the pedals and buttons to push while driving because I’m too involve with which way I should go.My husband still drives me to work.Hopefully I can able to learn to drive with confidence this summer.Thank God for navigators.I’m also happy to read this column that I’m not alone,I can show my husband this so that he’ll understand.By the way I read ‘The accidental tourist’ in high school that’s where I learned that this condition is called geographical dyslexia.

  6. Thank you, thank you for the diagnosis! My mother and I both suffer from this. Lately I’ve been thinking about getting a GPS navigational device even though I’ve lived in the same city for 27 years because I still get lost sometimes. Now I think it’s a necessity for me to get one, and not a luxury item.
    Thanks so much for blogging about this!
    Cindy

  7. wow! Yeah… it’s a completely embarrassing condition! My mom told me that other people had it but I didn’t believe her… I’m embarrassed even in front of my own family and now I have a job where I have to drive teenagers places sometimes and it’s a good thing they know where they’re going! Uhg… do you know where I might find more information on this (I’m 34 and I’ve been like this my entire life… I know I’m not stupid, I have 135 IQ and manage to effectively pull off every other life task so why can’t I find my car in a parking lot or my way back out of a camping spot at the lake? 🙁

  8. Vivian de St. Vrain Avatar
    Vivian de St. Vrain

    Dear friends: this essaylet on being lost is visited 2 or 3 times a day, sometimes more. Only one of a hundred visitors leaves a comment. Are the others ashamed to admit their problem? I think that we need a support group — it’s hopeless to complain to people who don’t share our affliction. If you fellow-sufferers leave me your real address, or write to me at drmetablog@hotmail.com, I’ll try to form a group. Dysgeographics of the world unite! You have nothing to lose but your way. Vivian

  9. Actually quite a lot of those visitors are me. I accidentally deleted my bookmark for your blog, so when I want to read it (several times a week I’m embarrassed to admit) I google ‘scrolling metablog’ and this page comes up top of the list. So I visit here as a stepping stone to the homepage. Just off there now. Merry Christmas (if you don’t object to the C-word).

  10. Thanks so much for your article. I am not ashamed of my affliction, and I would be delighted to unite with “my kind.” It is very hard to explain to folks, “how I get lost,” “why I arrive late from a mile away,” etc., etc., etc. I am from a family of perfectionists. Today I arrived 15 minutes late for my daughter’s birthday celebration. East Memphis, TN has many “wandering streets.” There are many streets that start out north and end up east, and so on. They twist and turn and end up nowhere. I have recently moved to East Memphis into a “high rise apartment in the sky.” It accommodates to my age. I left Midtown Memphis with its straight and familiar streets. They tell me I am close to everything, but I can’t find anything. If it weren’t for my husband, who likes to eat out and go out in general, I would stay at home and order everything. (He has Macular Degeneration and can’t drive anymore.) A trip to the beach is a tour through Mississippi and Alabama. We were accidental tourists once in Harrisburg, Mississippi, completely lost. We wandered into a Baptist Church, where they invited us for a wonderful potluck lunch. We had a great time, and I sent them a nice donation along with a card this Christmas.

  11. My friend and I both have this condition. It’s embarrassing and frustrating, but there is an upside; we often take a wrong road and discover new and wonderful places completely by accident!
    It’s weird how giving something a name makes it seem more legitimate. Now I can tell people I have “dysgeographica” and they’ll be sympathetic and concerned instead of treating me like an idiot!

  12. GPS navigator systems are very helpful, but sometimes they’re a bit off. Always a good idea to check the directions with someone at your destination to make sure they are accurate. When they’re off, I get even more confused because trying to find my way while hearing the voice of the navigation system really throws me off. I’ve named mine Chris (after St. Christoper). Yeah, I know he’s no longer a saint, but I like the idea.
    Anyone know of any way to put your own directions into the navigation system? I find the voice prompts incredibly helpful, but sometimes I get better directions from someone who really knows the area.
    My cousin & I both have such a hard time, we joke we’re lucky to live/work on islands (Long Island/Staten Island & Manhattan) because we’ll eventually hit water instead of ending up in say the Rockies! 🙂
    I’ve been at my current job for nearly 2 years & I’m just now starting to get the hang of all of the floors we’re located on. But we’re moving, which means it’ll take me another 2 years to get used to it.

  13. I have this problem. I always have. I decided to name it and call it “directional dyslexia” a few years ago. It’s been difficult for me, especially since I became a photojournalist and had to follow directions throughout the day and get places faster than others. I have learned some ways to cope, but for many years it was extremely frustrating. No one in my family has it besides me. Lucky them!
    Sometimes it makes me feel sick to my stomache and dizzy because I cannot figure out how to get back to where I was. I have to force myself to remember certain visual landmarks and/or write everything down.
    When I’m not concentrating I find myself looking in exactly 180 degrees different spot than the actual spot where something is located. For instance, I’ll take a guess that something is to the right, but invariably it’s to my left. Or, I’ll look to find a knife in the exact opposite location it’s kept in in the kitchen. This 100% reversal of direction in my mind led me to call the problem directional dyslexia.
    Does anyone else ever find they get dizzy and even sick to their stomach when experiencing the confusion that goes with this?
    I have, as I said, learned ways of coping and forgive myself easily now for my disability. I’m good at photography and dance and geometry, but I cannot tell north from south unless I’m picturing where the ocean is relative to where I am at. There’s nothing about knowing directions that comes intrinsically for me.
    Thank you so much for describing what I had for all the world to see. We’re not dumb, we’re challenged to perceive differently.

  14. Hi! I’ve known all my life that I had directional disability as far as knowing which direction I’m facing, finding my way out of a building, or driving a car. Otherwise, I have no other learning disabilities and in fact, have made excellent grades in school. It’s really odd because my dad always said you could put him in a potato sack and drop him anywhere in SE Oklahoma and he could find his way home…and that’s a very undeveloped area. He couldn’t understand why our mother and my sister and myself had problems getting lost. I know it’s genetic and we didn’t get his genes in this respect. My son is also the same way but my daughter isn’t. One of the most frustrating things I have done is to go down a familiar through street and think I’m going the wrong way, turn around just before I see my destination and then realize after a couple miles that I was going the right way after all. I don’t do this in my own neighborhood, but in the larger Oklahoma City area that I don’t travel every day but know well. I have been late a few times from this happening. I have to try to allow extra time. I’m glad to know the official name of this disorder. I think at least a third of the population are afflicted but probably won’t admit it.
    Sue Branham
    age 65

  15. vVivian Hussein de St. Vrain Avatar
    vVivian Hussein de St. Vrain

    Although we agree among ourselves that “directional dyslexia” is a useful term, the perception among the non-afflicted is that we are not disabled or afflicted, just stupid. I’m yet to see that “directional dyslexia” or “dysgeographica” has had an impact on society. But the comments here testify that there are many of us. Interesting to me that most if not all of the commenters here are female. Is the gene sex-linked? Or are men unwilling to ‘fess up?

  16. I read the same Reader’s Digest article mentioned by annamanila above. It was such a comfort knowing I wasn’t the only one dealing with this! I’m 51 years old and the first time I remember really getting lost was when I was 12 and on vacation in Maryland. (I live in Oklahoma.) My cousins and I were riding bikes and I got separated from them. I went into such a panic that I hyperventilated. I don’t know how long I was lost but it was an awful feeling I have repeated many times since. My ability to get lost is legendary in my family. My daughter has a touch of this stuff, but not nearly to my degree. I don’t know of anyone else in the family who has it. My husband and son are navigation whizzes. That’s a good thing or I’d never get to go on vacation! Thankfully, I CAN remember my way around the school where I teach. I use many of the same coping skills others have mentioned. I avoid driving on expressways because I can’t figure out where to turn at slow speeds so high speed decisions are out of the question.
    I do know a couple of men with this disability, but most of the other perpetually lost folks I know are women.

  17. My one sister says I am the only person she knows with a map of her own small home town in the glove box! I’ve sometimes driven around in circles ’cause there isn’t just one way from one place to another, and I think I’m going the wrong way and change my mind and go another.
    I worked in the same building for over 15 years and if asked, could not tell in which direction the road ran outside the building without several minutes of thought.
    Years ago I subbed in the library of a high school that was nicely organized into hallways around 2 square courtyards. Easy to navigate you’d think, however TWICE in one day I had to ask for directions back to the library. And as fate would have it the same tall young man was my rescuer in both cases. How embarrassing!
    It’s nice to know I’m not alone with this “disablility!”

  18. Wow, what a relief to put a name to something I’ve dealt with for the last 60 years! But does anyone else have trouble distinguishing left from right? I do – big time! I finally found a solution after I got married. I only wear one piece of jewelry, my wedding ring, and so if I’m supposed to turn left or right, I have to run my thumb over my ring and that is the only way I can tell which way I’m supposed to be going. I also have an almost complete lack of long term memory! My husband can remember his 2nd grade teacher, his classmates, etc., I’m lucky if I remember what happened yesterday! Ah well, at least I’m not alone! I’ll be checking back here on a regular basis.

  19. When I read the term “directional dyslexia,” I thought that was what I had, until I started reading everyone’s descriptions. I have no problem with directions or maps, and I don’t usually get lost, but I cannot verbally tell someone or be told by someone to go right or left without invariably turning toward or saying the opposite direction. To a much smaller degree, it also happens when writing directions, but I don’t think it happens as much because I have more time to think about it. I didn’t realize I had this until I was in college. My friends and I have learned to point when giving directions, because I have no problem with that. I also have figured out that I have the same problem with east and west and other similar (and sometimes dissimilar, except in my head) pairs of words. I realize I had the same problem when I was a kid with a pair of new step-cousin’s names — two boys, close in age, one blond, one dark hair — I could never remember which boy went with which name. I have also had similar “reversing” experiences with clock faces — I was late to pick up my brother once because I thought it was quarter to instead of quarter after. But primarily it is a right-left problem for me.

  20. T.R.Hollingsworth Avatar

    I’m 85 years old and have finally discovered there’s a name for the fact I’m always lost. When I enter a building from the right I automatically exit the same way. Same for driving unless I concentrate on a clue (building,etc.) – even if I know the route. When driving to an unknown location, I print (large) the route from a map. On the other side I reverse the directions. I keep it on the seat beside me. This helps. My grown children still talk about some of our adventures when living in DC area. Part of my history.

  21. I guess I will join the many expressing relief to find so many others and to have a name for this. I also am curious whether people with the direction problem also found themselves having problems learning to tell time as children. I also wish someone could help my friends and family understand that it is not because I am not “trying hard enough.”

  22. I have been laughed at and teased for 65 years about what I call navigational dyslexia. People think I’m stupid(far from it) or am not paying attention because I get “turned around”. There are certain places in Denver where I know I will always turn the wrong way when leaving a building. I am smart enough to have memorized most of the street names, write directions down, and get ANYWHERE I need to with a map. Had lots of trouble as a child learning right and left and I to read a map, I must always have the top of the map pointing to the north even if it’s upsidedown.

  23. I have such horrible directional sense! I’m almost 17 and afraid to start driving, partly because I know that I’ll have to start learning the roads and finding my way and this seems impossible. I can’t navigate someone to my house from two streets away.
    I’m so happy to have found this. I’m pretty sure I have dysgeographica, although no one else in my family does. It’s so nice to think that never being able to find my way isn’t my fault.

  24. judith a steinmetz Avatar
    judith a steinmetz

    I’ve been trying to find an Ann Lander’s column from many years ago, because she identified this problem, and I couldn’t remember . I have had this affliction all of my life, and always felt stupid and dumb. I’m 67 years old and don’t drive a car. I can never learn where to turn into a driveway off of the highway. I think my father had the same thing,but it never occurred to me until a few months ago. Ann Landers also said it was inherited. I also read Accidental Tourist and loved the book because I could identify with the characters. And yes, I’m glad I’m not alone.

  25. I sort of get N,S,W & E. Several places I’ve lived had a mountain or mountain range that gave me a landmark which really helped. I was hopeless when I lived in the midwest where it was totally flat. I always joked that if I ever left my husband and ran back to my parents on the west coast I’d probably end up in Canada because I could never figure out which way was west in that town.
    When someone starts giving me directions it’s almost like I don’t even hear what they are saying… blah,right, blah,blah,left,blah straight, blah, blah blah. I always write everything down.
    My mom threatened to write the words left and right on the back of my hands before I had to take the test for my driver’s license.

  26. I’m so glad I have finally found a name for this! My family/friends always make fun of me because I never know where anything is or how to get anywhere. They’ll tell me a street name that is a few streets away from my neighborhood and I’ll never know which one they’re talking about. I can only get to places that are within a .5 or 1 mile radius of where I live or else I’ll get completely lost even if I have gone that way numerous times. I just got my license a few months ago and it’s like worthless because I don’t know how to get anywhere and if people try to give me directions I get even more confused. I’m pretty intelligent so this has never made sense to me. I even try to memorize street names but I still get confused because it all looks the same to me. At my school [I’m in high school] I still forget which stairwell leads to which side of the building even though I have been there for 2.5 years. I also still dont know my left from my right (I have to put my hands out and see which one makes an ‘L’ haha) and can’t even begin to figure out which way is north/south/east/west. I have to like visually turn myself around [if that makes sense] and i just get so confused! Anyway..just glad to put a name to my ‘symptoms’. :]

  27. Thank you. I regularly find myself subject to ridicule because I cannot tell east from west and have difficulty with left and right on the fly. If I can take a second to concentrate I can get left and right but that took embarrasingly long (I was almost 20 years old before I stopped having to think ‘I write with my left hand…if I were to pick up a pencil which hand would I hold it in.’ It’s nice to know I am not the only one.
    Funny thing is according to my mother I have no other signs of dyslexia and I was COMPLETELY ambedexterous until I got into school (I taught myself to read and write before I started going to school). Needless to say this combined with the fact that I had so much difficulty with left and right frequently got me harrassed, especially in ROTC where I was expected to move on a moments notice, there I learned to watch the shoulders of the soldier ahead of me invariably they moved shoulders first by just a fraction of a second, I could then use that to react.

  28. Wow, it’s so nice to find this article. I always thought that I must be stupid because in order to figure out left and right I have to stick my hands in front of me & figure out which one I write with (I’m completely lost when it comes to North-South-East-West >.<). Whenever people ask me for directions I have to figure it out all over again. It's nice to know I'm not the only one with this problem... Thank you so much!

  29. Add another person to our list. I’m 18 and a freshman at an Ivy League school–but all my life, I’ve been completely unable to “instinctively” tell left from right or cardinal directions. My friends found it amusing, attributed it to my “lack of common sense”, though at times it would really get embarassing. After I started driving I got a little better with just “knowing” where to go within my own area, but receiving directions never went well and I’m now just as lost on my college campus. Asking for landmarks as directions (turn at the Burger King, etc.) generally works, though. It was just really nice to realize this wasn’t just me!

  30. I’m glad to see that I’m not alone. I cannot remember which way to get out of a store in a mall unless I’ve made the effort to memorize items on display along the way (‘clothes breadcrumbs’ so to speak). No connection to other cognitive abilities (got my doctorate in chemistry). I have to put a line in the middle of the letter z to see it differently from s. Casual friends think it a quaint homage to old-style writing.

  31. When I decided to become a realtor 20 years ago, my friends and family all thought I had lost my mind. “You can’t find your way out of a paper sack” was one of the many derisive comments they made. I told them I was going to consider my ability to get lost going around the block as a handicap, and overcome it. Until yesterday, I had never heard of a name being put on this condition. I can go to the same place 50 times, and 50 times I will have to use a map or Map Quest or now my blessed Garmin (I thought I had died and gone to heaven when I got it). One blogger wondered if there were other traits that went with this condition. Mine is having a real problem raising my right hand and left leg – or vice versa. When I started jazzercize about 30 years ago, it took me 6 months to be able to keep all my limbs going in the right direction. I think this condition is connected to the directional dylexia. And, like all the other bloggers, I’m happy to know this is a real live condition and not just me.

  32. When I was a little girl,my mother hardly took us anywhere unless my stepfather was with us.I used to get lost just walking to school,I figured it was because I was young.When my stepfather died unexpectadley my mother never went anywhere-we thoght it was depression.I grew up and still kept getting lost and turned around because to me everything looks alike and is blurred together.Naturally I get called dummy.After years of hiding my mother admitted she can’t find anything.I told my kids so they wouldn’t think I didn’t want to take them places.Now my kids are older and tell me where to go.My husband thinks it’s because I’m nervous.Ive tried to explain it.Now I can show him this websight.

  33. Alice, I had trouble learning to tell time. I didn’t “get it” until I was 11 years old. I still have to concentrate when I look at a clockface.
    Like others, I get totally turned around in malls. I memorize what I walked past when I came in, hoping to be able to find it to exit.
    I had an argument with a teenager a couple of nights ago. She said her mother should be embarrassed because she can’t find her way. I told her about this website and she had a hard time believing me. I told her to Google it. Dysgeographics, unite!

  34. I’m reading this in a fit of desperation–almost in tears as I just missed an important job interview as a result of this condition. It is so frustrating and embarrassing. I suspected that it was some sort of real learning disability, but this is the first time I’ve seen it discussed. I am very capable and intelligent on other fronts, and can memorize patterns easily–just not when driving. I wish somebody would do a little research on this condition. Nice to know I’m not alone though.

  35. Posted by Beth:
    My stepsister won’t drive at all because of it.We never had a name for it back then.Her husband tried to help her get used to driving but it was the usual comments,”your’e not paying attention,your stupid,etc…”The bus service where they were living wasn’t that good so she couldn’t get a job.Her husbands income wasn’t enough to support the family of 5.Her husband got frustrated and commited robbery and went to jail.They went on welfare for 10 years until he got out.She just paniked behind the wheel of a car.She got called stupid and lazy for years.Her husband is working again,her kids are now driving so she got a job with them driving her.I’m sure that’s not the only family whose lives were messed up.Before I had a car I would get lost walking places.I thought it was because I was in a coma when I was a child and something got damaged.My mother has it,but covered it up.She didn’t get her license until she was 30.My kids are a big help.I always said the streets all look alike,I never had a name for it.I drive to work,which is only a couple of miles down the street.I only have to make 1 turn.My old job I only had to make 2 turns.When you were little did you wonder if something was wrong?How did you find out this has a name?

  36. It was just this summer that I learned there is a name for this debilitating condition. When I tell people I can get lost in an elevator, they laugh and think I’m crazy – and sometimes I’ve thought maybe it’s true. Not so. When I was young, I had a very hard time learning to tell time until my grandmother got me a toy that I played with over and over until I learned. It was some kind of balance scale with numbers to hang on either side; they had to match up (balance) with a printed picture. I wish the toy still existed. Sometimes, in trying to simplify things, the school system actually makes them more complicated. Anyway, I also remember in Kindergarten reversing my letters on a card to my mother; I was so frustrated because no matter how often I erased it, I kept printing it the same way. I believe I was headed toward true dyslexia, but made such a tremendous effort that I was able to graduate from high school with honors. My directional problem really became an issue when I started to drive at age 28 (I’m now 57), but I have no idea how to explain my confusion to someone who doesn’t understand. It’s very hurtful to be made fun of for something I have no control over. My husband is a great help and knows this is serious – he’s a psychologist. Fortunately, I’ve lived in a small community for 20 years and have done well because of repetition, though I still need help on occasion. If I need to drive 60 miles to a doctor (I don’t go alone to shop), my husband will take me there the weekend prior to my appointment, giving me landmarks to find my own way. Then he will also show me landmarks how to get back. Sometimes the route is so complicated that he will take the day off and go with me, and usually it’s because the building is more confusing than the drive over. After driving to this city hundreds of times in the past 20 years, and knowing the streets are all north and south, when I’m behind the wheel it’s like a new city and north south mean nothing to me. Once, following a workshop I attended alone, even though my husband had shown me both ways, I ended up in a nearby state. That was before cell phones and I really struggled to find my way home. It was terrifying. Now, I’m wondering if my granddaughter inherited her dyslexia from me, and that breaks my heart. We had a very difficult time convincing the school that she was not “slow” and finally, on our own, had her tested by the Scottish Rite. She’s a very bright young lady with a high IQ who happens to have a disability. Now, as a sophomore, she’s told me she’s finally “getting” some things she’s struggled with for years in school. I’m really thankful to have found this site and read about others like myself. It broght tears to my eyes to know I’m not alone. My husband and I worry, sometimes, about what will happen if he dies before me. He’s afraid I’ll become a recluse because I won’t want to drive outside of our own community. He’s problably right. I’ll be reading “The Accidental Tourist” just as soon as I can find it.

  37. i feel so much better knowing its not just me 🙂 i had to drive to missouri when we evacuated for ike. its a 500 mile drive and it took me 700 miles. i dont even know where i went wrong or how i fixed it. we got there in one piece and thats all that really matters.

  38. I also always get lost. At school, I had great difficulties learning topography. I just couldn’t remember which place was where. Does anyone else recognize this?

  39. I have it too! I did read an article years ago that said such a thing existed but I did not know it had a name. It came from my father’s side as I have been told amusing stories about problems with marching in formation and square dancing.
    In my case, ballet lessons were horribly frustrating because I was always behind the music as I tried to figure out which foot was which.
    I love my GPS.

  40. my husband says that not only can i not find my way OUT of a wet paper bag, i cannot find my way INTO a wet paper bag! i have had directional problems all my life, i coined the phrase “directionally challenged”. my friend also has this problem, and when we try to travel together it is trouble! it’s comforting to know others can identify with me.

  41. I have been suffering from a directional disability for 54 years. I need to write large directions on a paper and keep it beside me anytime I go anywhere. I can go to the same place up to 5 times before I can remember how to get there. If it has been a few months since I went there, I need to get the directions again. I do not know where north, south, east or west is but do know my right from my left. I cannot understand a mirror image.I need to look back if I back up the car and have bumped into things a few times. I cannot follow dance classes, Tai Chi, Yoga, or any class where the instructor faces me and I have to do a mirror image of what they are doing. If anyone knows of some help for this please let me know. Karen

  42. WOW! I didn’t realize there were so many people out there suffering from this same “being late ’cause I got lost” situation. I started calling what I have directional dylexia after I began working as a teacher with kids who couldn’t get those pesky numbers and letters straight. This has helped me become much more patient and willing to help students try to find ways to cope. I suppose we dysgeograpics could have support meetings but too many of us would be driving around trying to figure out where we were actually supposed to be. I’m wondering if others have this thing that I have where it looks like you are going one way and feels like you are going another… a sort of ‘flip’ version of direction. Or is this what everyone has? I remember playing the ‘flip’ game in class as a kid, to keep from being bored. Of course, when I got bored with my little game, and focused back on class, I would realize I missed instructions, would have to ask for help, and would end up staying after school for talking… I too am an intelligent woman but feel sooooo stupid when I get lost. I would love to learn to sail but am afraid I will find myself in the middle of the ocean surrounded by hungry sharks…
    What an interesting site. Thanks

  43. I have to print out internet directions to go to the store. Once I know it, Im fine, but if there’s a some type of detour or blockage, I wont be able to get there. And often, internet directions are wrong, and I have to go home and start over.

  44. Kathleen Poetzsch Avatar
    Kathleen Poetzsch

    Wow, I have had this same thing my whole life, and I also call it directional dyslexia, because that’s what it seems to be. This is NOT just a bad sense of direction, it is the inability to find your way anywhere unfamiliar, without doing extreme research on the internet and mapping it all out ahead of time! I am better if there is someone unafflicted in the car with me to give me confidence and read maps for me. (I also cannot fathom maps, they are just a colorful jumble of lines and numbers to me.) It is really humiliating, especially in my own town, to have to plan out how to get places. I literally have to have traveled somewhere 25 times before I start to feel comfortable going here. Why has no one investigated this problem? It is obviously not uncommon, look at all the folks who have posted about it in the past few years! Maybe there is a problem with our brain chemicals or something!

  45. Susan McDonald Avatar
    Susan McDonald

    It is truly a relief to have read these emails. Thank you for sharing your personal info about our weird problem!!
    I feel like you do: people think we are dumb (we are not) and insist we aren’t paying attention. I swear, after I “learn” how to get somewhere, the next time I try to go there, I am in a kind of FOG, trying to remember how I even started to go there!
    I thought for 50 years that I was perhaps the only person in the world that had what I call (like others) directional dyslexia.
    Then my sister told me that she gets lost a lot when driving, and that her son “is always driving around lost.” And, I think my grandma had the problem.
    So, I think it probably is inherited. I would like to know if my brain is functioning differently from people who don’t get lost easily.
    Thanks again to all my fellow sufferers who wrote.

  46. I remember being a small child and getting lost constantly. Terrifyingly lost, a lot of the time. I’m used to it now, and it doesn’t bother me often. Except if you end up in a bad neighborhood after dark. My sweetie is also directionally dyslexic. If there’s a right turn/ left turn decision -which should be 50-50, ninety-five percent of the time, we go the wrong way! Even after visiting someone’s house ten times, we can’t find it. I have had a car crash because of my “directional dyslexia.” One interesting fact about me, I can remember the name of almost everyone I meet, without trying, and I see at least 10 new faces a day. I know at least two thousand people by name and they are practically strangers! Great job skill since I’m in hospitality. But, I can’t remember numbers, and even forgot the date of my own birthday once. Totally unrelated? We’ll never know until someone does a study. Thankfully, my six year old son does not have this trait. At two years of age, if we said we were going to the park and turned off the regular three mile route for some reason he would strongly convey his displeasure. He knew the way better than the adults! wish someone would do the study.

  47. A lady from my church just told me she has “directional dyslexia.” I’d never met anyone before who said she felt as I do. (So I goggled the term and found this page.)
    I tell people that for my whole life I’ve functioned as if someone has just spun me around in the game “Pin the Tail on the Donkey” and let me go. I have no idea which direction to take, and could never tell you which direction is north, south, east or west.
    My oldest son has had trouble telling his left from his right all his life, and we’ve joked it’s my fault (although I don’t suffer with this particular symptom and he doesn’t suffer from mine).
    I saw a post earlier in which someone said they always thought their friend with directional problems was a bit stupid. My son and I are in Mensa so I think it’s fair to say the disorder has nothing to do with intelligence.
    It is a little frustrating to live with it… but not too much since I don’t remember ever being any other way. And sure enough, friends and family members do find it amusing. I think it’s very interesting how one’s brain can work perfectly fine in some things, but be a complete mess in other areas.
    Thanks for the info. I’ll have to tell my son about your site, and we should check out “The Accidental Tourist.”
    Amy 🙂

  48. I too have struggle with this for most of my life. I jokingly began to call my self directionally dyslexic a few years ago. I knew I how confused I get with directions and I firgured it had to be very similar to those who have reading dyslexia when they try to read the written word. I was amazed when I googled D.D. and so many sites came up!
    Could someone tell me which issue of the
    Reader’s Digest had the article on
    Directional Dyslexia?

  49. Heidi De La Rocha Avatar

    For as long as I can remember I was labled dyslexic. I had a very hard time with spelling and comprehension, and math, but the hardest is my profound inability to get to new places, many times I have to depend on my husband to take me, which is very frustrating, but the hardest part is remembering how I got there. I never bother with maps, they make no sence to me. I am so glad I saw this sight, it puts more understanding into what I have. I have never hurd of directional dyslexia, but I know this is what I have. I always remember getting lost. One time when I was eleven I wanted to go to a store to buy some pensils. I got so lost I was walking around for two hours. I finaly called my grandmother and she picked me up. I took too many turns and could not find my may back. I was a competative gymnast in colledge, and because I was the smallest I had to lead my team out to the floor. This always caused me so much anxiety. One time I marched are team out in the opposite dirction, some of my teammates were so mad.
    I have to say I have learned to overcome many of my learning disabilitys with hard work, but it is always painful. I have children and so many times I can not take them places since I know I would get lost. I am so glad to know there are others that know how it feels. Sometimes you feel so different then others. Thanks Heidi De La Rocha

  50. I am so glad this has a name! I am 30 and a PhD student and all my life people have made fun of me because I am chronically lost! I’ve tried to explain that I just have no sense of place whatsoever, but how do you describe that to someone who’s never experienced it? All the rest of my family have a great sense of direction and my mother has an innate sense of where she is, what direction she’s facing, and how to get from A to B whether she’s two minutes from home or in a completely new city halfway around the world – needless to say, she’s completely bemused by the fact that I can get lost in the city in which I’ve lived my entire life… When I need to get from one place to another, even if it’s somewhere I’ve been a hundred times before, I can envisage points along the route but never the whole route and I can never make the points join up in my head. I don’t know anyone else like this, and it’s so great to know that I’m not alone! I’m going to start explaining that I have dysgeographica from now on and see if people still think it’s okay to laugh…. :o)

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