COMMENTS ON THIS BILLBOARD

Oct 28, 2007

>> Thank You FBL Foundation! These Billboards represent the best in all of us-Thanks for the inspiration!   Don P., Anderson, Indiana USA

Oct 22, 2007

>> I did not get diagnosised till I was 25. I was told by a reading teacher and 4th grade that I was lazy. My whole childhood was filled with hurt and pain. Thank you so much for making it OK.   Debbie W., Michigan, USA

Oct 11, 2007

>> I am so pleased that this billboard has been created. My 10 year old daughter has dyslexia and often feels all alone, I'm glad she can see have tangible evidence of successes.   Jean S., Marysville, Michigan USA

Aug 8, 2007

>> This gives my brother, who is dyslexic, hope for a future.   Karolina K., Guelph, Ontario Canada

Jul 27, 2007

>> nice job keep growing   D Amilare, nigeria

Jul 25, 2007

>> I am a slow learner but once I get the grip of things I am good to go. I learn that everything comes with practice    Mary J, Jamaica

Jun 4, 2007

>> That's right hard work makes you powerful. I can relate to her, I am a hard of hearing person and it does not stop me from achieving.   Sandra L., Texas, USA

Apr 9, 2007

>> Amazing, truly amazing!   William L., St. Louis, MO

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Whoopi Goldberg was born in New York City in 1955, as Caryn Johnson. She spent the first years of her life in a public housing project in Manhattan. Over the course of a turbulent early life, she survived poverty, drug addiction, single motherhood and a stint on welfare to become one of America's most beloved entertainers.

Whoopi also struggled with dyslexia and, as a result, dropped out of high school. "I knew I wasn't stupid, and I knew I wasn't dumb. My mother told me that. Everybody told me I wasn't stupid or dumb. If you read to me, I could tell you everything that you read. They didn't know what it was. They knew I wasn't lazy, but what was it?" When she was an adult, she finally found the reason for her reading struggles - dyslexia. As Whoopi once recounted, "I learned from a guy who was running a program and he had written a sentence on a board. And I said to him, 'You know, I can't read that.' And he said, 'Why not?' And I said, 'Because it doesn't make any sense to me.' So he said, 'Well, whatever you see, write exactly what you see underneath.' And so, he brought me to letters by coordinating what I saw to something called an A, or a B, or a C, or a D, and that was pretty cool."

She said it still takes effort, but time and hard work has made it easier for her to read.