this post was submitted on 16 Feb 2026
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Other conditions exist. I have auditory processing disorder and one part of it is an involuntary disabling of my audio processing when my brain is trying to focus on something, particularly anything else to do with language like note-taking. My ears will "hear" but my brain won't.
It wasn't completely debilitating, but it made certain kinds of classes inordinately difficult for me. Discussion based classes were a nightmare for me, and no amount of practice could change how my brain works. So instead I pursued STEM where the notes are math and I could work ahead and tune in if I got stuck.
That being said, handwritten notes are still definitely the way to go in math!
Same!!! I have the auditory thingy and dyslexia, so writing (words, not math) was hell on earth for me for most of highschool. Getting to use a laptop in 11th and 12th grade was a godsent.
But in 10th grade I actually did something that mostly solved my hatred of handwriting: I taught myself calligraphy and whole-arm-writing. Now I love handwriting, don't have pain doing it anymore, people compliment my writing, etc.
Though I still can't listen to stuff while writing 🤷 luckily I was able to use a laptop in lectures (philosophy is very notes heavy), and after college it becomes irrelevant, thank god.
Damn that sounds rough. I've got some dyslexic family members and I can't imagine combining their struggles with auditory processing disorder.
Nah, I managed surprisingly well. In third grade I did really intense dyslexic-specific tutoring (9h a week), and it helped massively. I actually ended up scoring the highest reading comprehension score in my random regional school's class in 5th grade, I think because of it. There were struggles, but nothing I couldn't live with. One of my best friends was trans (not publicly back then, ofc), and trust me their school experience was far, far more difficult. I just felt some camaraderie, finding someone else with a audio processing disorder; I didn't mean to fish for sympathy or anything like that.
Yeah, our struggles definitely pale in comparison to marginalized groups. And no worries! I didn't think you were, I just know how much my brother-in-law struggled with dyslexia, though he didn't have a very supportive family so he didn't even get diagnosed until he was an adult.
They think my nephew is showing early signs of it too, but hopefully his experience will be closer to yours since he'll get support early on.
Auditory processing disorder is such a weird one. In a lot of contexts I actually like it, it's like having earmuffs without wearing anything. I just wish I could turn it on and off intentionally. Sometimes I need it because the unfiltered background noise is too much but it won't turn on. Sometimes I'm trying to take in audio and don't realize it's turned on and I missed a bunch.
I've also realized that I actually read lips a lot to compensate for background noise, so I've been trying to hone that skill more intentionally. Another thing that's maybe a benefit of the disorder.
I also have auditory processing disorder. It sucks. Why I always liked teachers who wrote on the board as they lectured, I'd even read the chapter from the book instead of listening to the teacher. Thats great you found what worked for you! You found what worked and became successful despite your struggles! That's resiliency!