Dear
Subject:
Let’s skip the sugarcoating.
It is brutal watching your child struggle with things that seem easy for everyone else.
- Reading
that never “clicks”
- Attention that drifts every 10 seconds
- Memory that leaks like a sieve
- Homework that turns into a nightly war you never signed up for
And the worst part?
You’ve tried.
You’ve really tried with…….
😃More reading
😃Different book
😃Homework routines
😃Rewards, consequences, timers
😃Tutors who help for a week…
until everything slides back again.
And you’re left thinking:
- “Why is reading still such a fight?”
- “Why does my child forget things so quickly?”
- “Why can’t they focus long enough to finish a simple task?”
- “Why does it feel like nothing we do actually
sticks?”
Here’s what most parents are never told:
👉 If a child’s processing, attention, and memory skills are weak, reading will always feel hard — and homework will always be a battlefield.
❌This isn’t about effort
❌It’s not about motivation
❌It’s not about your parenting
It’s about the brain working twice as hard for half the result.
There is a way out ……strengthen those underlying skills and
📍reading gets easier
📍and focus lasts longer
📍and memory finally sticks
📍and homework stops feeling like a war zone
If you’re tired of trying things that don’t move the
needle, hit reply.
Tell me what you’re seeing at home.
I’ll help you figure out what’s going on — and what can actually help.
You don’t have to keep fighting this fight alone.
Just hit reply and put "sugarcoating" in the text.
John
P.S. Here’s a review that landed yesterday from Gean B.:
“This program is the real deal. My child finally stopped feeling ‘behind’ and started feeling proud of their progress in reading.
The small, daily activities make it simple and never overwhelming—and the results actually show up in school.
I only wish
I’d found this sooner. I’d recommend it to any parent who wants their child to feel confident and capable again.”
P.P.S. For great resources sign into our Skool Homeschooling Community (it's free) here
Kind Regards,
John
john@neuronlearning.com
+353 (0)21 202 4553
http://www.neuronlearning.com
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