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sport / alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors / NBCSBA (Poole): GP2 continues to pay it forward after life-changing diagnosis

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o NBCSBA (Poole): GP2 continues to pay it forward after life-changingRobin Miller

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NBCSBA (Poole): GP2 continues to pay it forward after life-changing diagnosis

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From: robin.mi...@invalid.invalid (Robin Miller)
Newsgroups: alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors
Subject: NBCSBA (Poole): GP2 continues to pay it forward after life-changing
diagnosis
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 by: Robin Miller - Sun, 17 Dec 2023 06:16 UTC

https://www.nbcsportsbayarea.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/gary-payton-ii-dyslexia/1681944/

GP2 continues to pay it forward after life-changing diagnosis

By Monte Poole

• Published December 16, 2023

SAN FRANCISCO – Spelling the simplest words was a nightmare, and trying
to read anything was downright terrifying. Life hits hard when a child
sits in an elementary-school classroom seeing other children grasp what
he cannot.

It wasn’t much better at home. His mother and father provided love, but
their attempts at tutoring led to mounting frustration.

“I would say one thing and write something else,” Gary Payton II told
NBC Sports Bay Area in an exclusive "Dubs Talk" interview. “During the
sentence, I would skip a word and write it. And then my parents were
just confused. Why am I not getting things similar to my classmates and
whatnot? And I was also thinking that, too. Like why am I not
understanding this.

“They were pretty hard on me at first. They didn’t know.”

All his parents understood was that their son needed help. While much of
dad’s energies were devoted to being a breadwinning NBA All-Star,
Monique was consulting with teachers, seeking help for “Little G.” When
his second-grade teacher mentioned the possibility of dyslexia, Monique
swung into action.

Dyslexia, described by the International Dyslexia Association as “a
specific learning disability that is neurobiological in origin,
characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word
recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities.”

This, she thought, sounded like what her son might be dealing with.

Payton was tested, and that was the diagnosis – but only the first step
to unraveling the psychological impact accumulated over years.

The next step involved the actor Henry Winkler, who gained fame in the
role of Arthur “Fonzie” Fonzarelli in the TV comedy “Happy Days” that
ran from 1974 through 1984. Winkler was 31 when he was diagnosed in 1977
with dyslexia. He had spent nearly two years in Hollywood struggling to
read and recite scripts.

Winkler, in a recent interview with ABC, conceded that he was “sitting
around that first reading of the script with the entire cast, completely
covered my shame with humor” because he stumbled throughout.

Monique read that Winkler was dyslexic, contacted his representatives
and arranged a meeting. “Little G” did not know of “The Fonz,” but his
mother did. Winkler made himself available.

“We meet him and he literally tells me it's OK, that he was a grown man
and he still has an assistant that actually helps with spelling,” Payton
recalls. “And he still gets help for reading and whatnot. He's afraid to
read in front of groups and stuff like that.

“After meeting with Mr. Winkler, that helped me a lot and gave me the
confidence to be able to say that I need help. And after that, my mom
found out and broke down because they were so hard on me.”

The diagnosis and follow-up changed the trajectory of Payton’s
childhood. He went from a child who didn’t enjoy school and telling his
mother “I don’t want to be dumb,” to a solid student who, in May 2023
earned his degree in Human Development and Family Science from Oregon
State University.

Reflecting on his childhood struggles, Payton has decided to reach out
to others who might be experiencing the same challenges. Just as he had
been touched and encouraged by a famous actor, he would extend the same
generosity as an NBA player.

Payton founded, during the 2021-22 NBA season, the Gary Payton II
Foundation. The co-executive directors are his mother and his sister,
Raquel Payton Childs, who happens to be a teacher.

The foundation acts, according to its website, “as a conduit for
Dyslexia-awareness, supporting early screening, detection, and certified
assessment for youth and young adults with languages-based learning
challenges.”

Recently, the foundation acquired a truck to offer mobile services to
test those who otherwise might not have the means to get tested.

“It goes out and pulls up to neighborhoods and [does] testing because
it's so hard for parents and kids to go out and find testing,” Payton
says. “We’re just trying to make ways to identify the first problem.
Just to identify. And then, second, is to treat it and get the help you
need.”

Payton’s life was changed by a diagnosis and an actor. He’s paying it
forward, hoping to change lives with diagnosis and outreach.

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