Tonight there was a documentary on Channel Five called Shane Lynch - My Secret Past, discussing the issues of Boyzone star Shane Lynch and his dyslexia. I had been looking forward to the program for two reasons. One is because I'm dyslexic and the other is because I produce documentary films. I was interested to see how the issue was portrayed and hoped to receive some insight into the subject.
I am sorry to say that I feel highly let down by the program makers. They had an hour of our time, a decent subject to feature and a fair few interesting people in the backup cast of characters. I have often thought about making a film on the subject, what I'd want to say and how I'd want to say it.. As I watched I felt a rising sense of anger. I don't think they could have got it more wrong if the tried. The big story was the build up to Shane's dyslexia test. Why on earth they chose this as the narrative and the story, God only knows. There were all manner of interesting facts which were skimmed on. 40% of the prison population are dyslexic. Children with dyslexia often are angry and disruptive. Young people with dyslexia hide from help. Some dyslexic people are very successful. Reading in public is stressful.
If you've read my series of blogs on dyslexia, none of this would have been news to you. What made me want to hurl a rock at the TV was just how little time was given to explore this. It was all part of the build up to Shane, who can't read very well, being given an assessment and being told he's dyslexic.
This could have been a really important piece of TV, yet we were left with something as satisfying as a cold shower. Take the interview with the young man in the young offenders institution. There were four people in the interview, yet we heard nothing from the lady who was helping him and we heard nothing from his mentor (who I assumed was another prisoner). We heard nothing from anyone who talked about dyslexia and the coping strategies we develop. We heard nothing of the spectrum of dyslexia. We heard nothing about the differences in how the dyslexic brain processes information. We saw a bit of Shanes sister saying how she didn't really realise he had problems, but nothing of how this affected his behaviour. Did he not want us to know how much of a bastard he could be? There was a small moment where I saw a vague reflection of myself. When he was driving to his assessment, he got irrationally and extremely angry. It was the stress of being tested. I recognised the anger. I am a very calm person 99% of the time. I do however have an extremely bad reaction to people in authority lying.
A recent case of this was in the Friern Barnet Library Court case. A Barnet Council official took the stand and started telling porkies. Rosie Canning, from the Save Friern Barnet Library campaign noticed a strange physical change in me. I'd turned bright red. I think Rosie thought I was about to have a heart attack. She asked if I was OK. I responded that I was fine, I just couldn't stand liars. She was a bit perturbed, I suspect. This reaction dates back to incidents at school. I was not a star pupil and I was deemed disruptive. On one occasion, I was nearly expelled, but for the intervention of a teacher I got on well with. When it came down to it, the Headmaster of the school was telling bare faced lies and getting away with it. Up until that point, I'd assumed such people were honest and decent. As I was fourteen at the time, I knew no one would believe what I had to say. I was overcome by feelings of impotence and paranoia. The Headmaster sent me out of his office, whist he made a few phonecalls. At that moment, our physics teacher walked past, who I got on well with. He asked me what was wrong, I explained the situation, and he intervened. I was amazed that he cared enough to bother. I really didn't think I deserved it. I had been set up by a couple of other boys, in a silly prank. It was obvious to any fair minded individual what had happened. The physics teacher spoke to the boys and got them to own up to the headmaster. He personally guaranteed that they would not be punished if they did, as it was clearly a joke which had gone badly wrong. I had agreed to let him help me and told him the names of the other boys on the condition that if he couldn't persuade them to own up, he would not intervene further. Strangely enough, having nearly been expelled, I was then given a lecture on what fine young men they were to tell the truth and come forward and save me. The physics teacher later told me that he was flabbergasted at the headmasters attitude to the whole incident. He also said that he admired the fact that I would only tell him the names of the boys on condition that he wouldn't dob them in if they didn't cooperate.
The incident made me very wary of people in positions of authority. As it was I was expelled not long after for a very trivial incident. The Headmaster of the school told me I'd never be anything. Fortunately, I transferred to another school and to some degree wiped the slate clean. I wondered if there were any such incidents in Shane's past. He didn't really seem to want to open up. He had a schoolfriend in the film, but we got no incite at all as to the real Shane. We found out that he likes to be in the countryside and have walks with his daughter. We found that he'd never been in a library. What we didn't find was how he really felt about his demons. There were all sorts of things which were glossed over. There is a horrible tendency in documentaries to want to give us a happy ending. The girl doing a degree gets her laptop, the lad in prison wants to get on the straight and narrow. I don't think this helps us at all. What we need to do is get across to people just how horrible and terrifying it can be to be dyslexic. The best moment in the film was when a young girl talked about her problems. Sadly, like much of the film, just when she opened up it, we cut to something else.
There's all sorts of things I'd have liked to have seen in the film. I'd have like to have seen what the dyslexic lads mentor had to say about him. I'd like to have heard more from the lady teaching the prisoners as to how they help the prisoners get their lives on track. I'd have liked to have heard more from the children in the special unit talking about how the issues affect them. Instead we had Shane walking in the woods waffling on interminably about nothing. I felt the makers didn't trust the viewers to "get it". They wanted to focus on Shane because he was the star. I felt he was simply the keyholder opening the door to some interesting rooms. I'd also have liked to have heard how Shane got into Boyzone, what inspired him to take that road. Was he a talented musician as a youngster? All we had was a very unhappy dyslexic fourteen year old, who suddenly became a superstar. Was singing a release from a difficult life? Would he have still been a singer if the band didn't make it. Strangely there were a few parallels between myself and Shane. Bot our parents owned garages. I wanted to work at my fathers garage, but as a teenager, I fought constantly with everyone, so it wouldn't have worked. I got into music. Whilst I didn't become a superstar, it did give me a focus and something which I didn't have to worry about dyslexia. Being in a band has always given me a gang and a bit of security. This was something I never really felt I had at school, although I had some great friends. For all my school years, I was always terrified of being exposed as a fraud, humiliated, downtrodden and victimised. Luckily for me, I was able to hold my own and the fears were internal rather than a response to external problems. I had hoped for insights into all of this. Sadly all I got was a feeling I'd been cheated.
My wife, who is not dyslexic and doesn't really understand the condition at all (despite suffering me for 27 years on and off), said "how come you can read if you are dyslexic" near the end. I replied "there is a spectrum, he's more dyslexic than I am". I had hoped that maybe the program would help her understand a bit better, but no, she just thinks I'm not even much good at being dyslexic now.
I'd love to make a film about dyslexia. I've no idea if the non dyslexics amongst us would find it very interesting, but the one in ten who are, would finally have something which they might be able to get. The sad thing about these blogs is that the people who might enjoy them most, won't ever be able to read them properly.
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar