Free Family Resource

The Emotional Side of Dyslexia: Supporting Your Child's Confidence

Dyslexia does not just affect reading. It can shape how your child feels about themselves, school, and learning. Understanding the emotional side is just as important as understanding the academic one.

Part One

What Families Often Do Not See

Children with dyslexia work harder than their peers just to keep up. That effort is often invisible to the adults around them, but the emotional weight of it is very real.

The Hidden Effort
Many children with dyslexia spend their school day masking how hard reading is for them. They may memorize passages, rely on context clues, or stay quiet during reading activities. By the time they get home, they are emotionally and mentally drained.
The Internal Story
When a child struggles with something that seems easy for everyone else, they often draw a simple conclusion: something must be wrong with me. This belief can take root long before a child is identified or diagnosed, and it can persist even after support begins.

Part Two

Common Emotional Patterns

Not every child with dyslexia experiences the same emotions, but these patterns show up often enough that every family should know what to watch for.

Anxiety about reading. Reluctance to read aloud, nervousness before school, stomach aches on test days. Reading-related anxiety can look like general anxiety, but it is often very specific.
Avoidance behaviors. Forgetting books at school, stalling during homework, acting out before reading time. These behaviors are often misread as laziness or defiance when they are really self-protection.
Low self-esteem. Statements like "I am stupid" or "I cannot do anything right." Children who feel consistently behind their peers may begin to see themselves as less capable across the board.
Frustration and anger. Meltdowns during homework, throwing materials, shutting down. When effort does not produce results, frustration is a natural response.
Loss of motivation. A child who once tried hard may stop trying altogether. This is not apathy. It is a learned response to repeated failure. If effort never seems to work, giving up feels safer.
Perfectionism or rigidity. Some children respond by trying to control everything. They may refuse to attempt a task unless they are sure they can do it perfectly, or they may erase and rewrite the same word over and over.

Part Three

What You Can Do

You cannot remove the challenge, but you can change how your child experiences it. These strategies help protect their emotional well-being while they build their reading skills.

Name It and Normalize It
Talk about dyslexia openly and simply. Let your child know that their brain works differently when it comes to reading, and that this is not their fault. Use language like, "Your brain is wired to learn reading a different way, and we are going to make sure you get the right kind of teaching."
Celebrate Strengths Loudly
Make sure your child hears about what they are good at just as often as they hear about what needs work. Their identity should not be defined by their reading difficulty. Highlight creativity, problem-solving, humor, kindness, curiosity, or anything else that makes them who they are.
Separate Effort from Outcome
Praise the work, not just the result. "You stayed focused for that entire passage" matters more than "You got them all right." Children with dyslexia need to know that their effort is seen and valued, even when the outcome is not perfect.
Keep Home a Safe Space
Home should not feel like an extension of the classroom struggle. Protect time for play, connection, and activities where your child feels confident. If homework is causing daily meltdowns, talk to the school about modifications.
When to Seek Additional Support

If your child is showing signs of persistent anxiety, depression, social withdrawal, or if emotional struggles are intensifying despite your support, it may be time to involve a counselor or therapist who understands learning differences. Emotional well-being and academic progress are deeply connected, and addressing both leads to the best outcomes.

Get Started

Want help supporting your child?

I work with the whole child, not just the reading skill. If your child is struggling emotionally alongside their reading difficulty, I would be glad to talk about how intervention can help rebuild confidence.

info@northwoodsliteracylodge.com