Wired Differently - The Dyslexic Scientist
Douglas B. SimsBeing a human whirlwind with a side of chaos might just be your superpower.
What if the things people said were wrong about you weren't wrong at all, just misunderstood? What if the struggles with dyslexia and ADHD they warned would hold you back were actually the ingredients for an extraordinary life?
My brain wasn't broken. It was wired differently. In this book, I'll show you how those differences helped me build a career in science, because success doesn't always stay inside the lines.
This isn't a book about perfection. If you're looking for neat boxes, color-coded life plans, or a five-step formula for becoming a polished corporate robot, this is your cue to run.
This book is about breaking those boxes apart and rewriting what success looks like. It's about owning your story, messy, loud, brilliant, and using it to build a future no one saw coming, including you.
I was never the kid teachers bragged about. I was the one they talked about in the teachers' lounge. "Is he even paying attention?"
For the record, I was. Just not to what they thought I should be paying attention to.
I spent years in a system that didn't know what to do with a brain like mine. I carried labels and low expectations everywhere. But I didn't just survive it, I surprised everyone, including myself.
I went from struggling to read as a kid to becoming a scientist, professor, and eventually Dean of the School of Science, Engineering, and Mathematics at the College of Southern Nevada.
Not exactly what my fifth-grade reading group predicted.
One thing I've learned: people still believe dyslexia limits what you can achieve. That it caps your intelligence, leadership, or future.
They're wrong.
Dyslexia doesn't mean you're less capable. It means you think differently. Different thinking is where creativity lives. It's where innovation starts while everyone else is still following the same script.
Many things that once felt like weaknesses, reading differently, processing information your own way, taking the long road instead of the obvious one, become strengths. They build resilience, creativity, and problem-solving skills.
You learn to adapt.
You learn to push through.
You learn to see what others miss.
Those skills matter.
If you've ever been made to feel like dyslexia was a limitation, hear this clearly: it's not. It's a different way of thinking, and once you learn how to use it, it becomes an advantage.
This book is part battle cry, part pep talk, and part reminder for anyone who's ever been underestimated, misunderstood, or told to "tone it down." It's about turning what makes you different into something powerful.
What I didn't know back then, and what I want you to know now, is this: when the world hands you a map that doesn't make sense, don't follow it. Make your own.
If you're a student drowning in doubt, a professional tired of pretending to be "normal," or someone who's been told to "be realistic" one too many times, consider this your permission slip.
Stop apologizing. Stop shrinking. And for the love of caffeine, stop trying to be someone else.
Neurodiversity isn't a flaw. It's a different kind of brilliance.
You are not broken.
You're built differently.
And the world should probably get ready for that.
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Douglas B Sims
Published: 06/01/2026
ISBN: 9781966739135
Pages: 210
Weight: 0.99lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.50d
