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To have language is to have power, to
have language is to have the building blocks you need to function, to
succeed. Now imagine a world where for the span of your life that power
is absent.
To have dyslexia is to live in a world where language is always an effort,
always a strain, a complex jumble of shapes and meaning you constantly
have to work to get to line up in your brain.
The aim is to allow the viewer to physically and emotionally experience
how the world of written language appears to a sufferer in the hope that
empathy and understanding is formed.
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