own words below:
I have struggled with reading since I was in elementary school in Houston. I was labeled a slow learner when I was about 12 and put in an alternative school. The chance to learn stopped with that school where all we did was play games. By the time I convinced my mother to help get me back into regular school, I was two years behind. I was moved along in high school and graduated, and I tried college—but it didn’t work.
All my life I was embarrassed about my reading and writing problems, and I hid them away as best I could. But these problems affected my life in many ways, from my marriage to my ability to make a good living. I had low paying jobs for most of my life. And then, two things happened that changed my life.
My second tutor has helped me make more progress in my reading skills. I finished reading my first book, The Things They Carried, a wonderful book about soldiers in the Vietnam War by Tim O’Brien. I learned what it is like to “fall in love with a story.”
So after years of struggle, my life has changed. I am taking courses at Houston Community College. I will get my degree, one course at a time. I have the best job I have ever had at Walgreens Distribution Center. I hope my experience will teach my children and others that it is never too late to learn and that you should never, ever give up. I no longer feel the shame as I am able to read and write.
“I realized I had just written the first paragraph I could remember. Tears came to my eyes, and I could not stop crying.
I continue to push myself, and I know I can overcome any problem standing in my way. I want to thank everyone at the program for changing my life. I want to thank Barbara Bush and all of you who support the important cause of literacy.
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