The Threshold for Confusion
Copyright
© 1989">
The Threshold for Confusion
Copyright
© 1989, 1998 by Ronald D. Davis. All rights reserved.
When
dyslexic people make mistakes in reading or spelling, it is because they are
experiencing disorientation, which results in distorted perceptions. The
person's threshold for confusion is a key factor in how often he or she
disorients. A person with a lower threshold is more easily confused, and thus is
more often disoriented. A person with a higher threshold is less easily confused
and less frequently disoriented.
This
explains why at certain times people can read and spell fairly well, and at
other times they can't. Their threshold for confusion changes.
After a
person learns to detect and correct his or her own disorientations through
Davis Orientation Counseling,
and begins mastering symbols that cause confusion, the threshold for confusion
naturally increases.
Besides
confusion about words and symbols, there are other things in life that can lower
the threshold for confusion and affect a person's ability to maintain
orientation. One should be aware of these other sources of confusion and resolve
them whenever possible. They include:
not
enough rest,
poor
diet or not enough food,
illness, pain, or injury,
drugs
or medicines,
print
size too small,
print
too faint,
varying print styles and typefaces,
loud
noises,
specific sounds,
certain smells,
poor
lighting (can be too much or too little),
excess motion (whirling fans, dangling decorations),
a
change in the orderliness of the environment,
furniture rearrangement,
moving households,
scheduling changes,
time
pressure (being rushed),
threats of punishment,
family strife,
fear,
a
loss,
anything that is a reminder of an unpleasant past experience.
Davis
Orientation Counseling will help a person to recognize and control
disorientations, but it cannot prevent disorientations that stem from outside
factors, such as those listed above. It is thus important for the person to also
learn to recognize these sources of confusion, so they can be avoided, resolved
or minimized.