Now 89, this one-time beauty contestant has a new life after dyslexia and ADHD diagnosis - Action News
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Now 89, this one-time beauty contestant has a new life after dyslexia and ADHD diagnosis

One-time beauty contestant Betty Hogg, 89, had a difficult childhood, moving from town to town with parents who eventually separated, and then living with extended family. The Guelph, Ont., resident struggled in school and never earned a high school diploma. At 78, she received an ADHD and dyslexia diagnosis that changed her life.

Betty Hogg struggled with reading and math for years, only now understands her brain is wired differently

Betty Hogg, fourth from left, came third in the West Lorne Beauty Contest. The photo was featured in the St. Thomas Times-Journal on July 29, 1949.
Betty Hogg, fourth from left, came third in the West Lorne Beauty Contest. The photo was featured in the St. Thomas Times-Journal in Ontario on July 29, 1949. (Elgin County Archives)

Betty Hogg of Guelph, Ont., remembers her brief foray into beauty pageants fondly, though sheadmits if shecould go back, she'dthink twice about getting into them.

"I didn't know any better," said Hogg, whonow calls herself a "real women's libber."

Elgin County Archives recently shared a black-and-white photo from 1949 of Hogg and eight otherpageant contestants at the West Lorne Beauty Contest in southwestern Ontario. The young women stand tall in their bathing suits and heels, and flashtheir brightest, widestsmiles. At 16,Hoggis fourth from the left.

I was always the odd one. I couldn't learn.I couldn't memorize. I couldn't do spelling.- Betty Hogg

After marrying twice, raising five children and working odd jobs in many parts of this province, Hogg is sharing thepart of her story that dramatically changed her outlook on life. At 78, Hogg's family physician diagnosed her with both dyslexia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

"It just made all the difference in the world," Hogg told London Morning host Rebecca Zandbergen."You think that you're stupid. I knew I wasn't lazy because Inever sat down to relax. I was driven."

Betty Hogg on her 89th birthday last year. Hogg, who turns 90 this September, was diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia at age 78. It changed her life, she says.
Hogg, shown on her 89th birthday last year, turns 90 this September. She was diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia at age 78, and says it changed her life. (Submitted by Betty Hogg)

Tough upbringing

At the time thatphotograph was taken, Hoggwas in the middle of a tumultuouschildhood that saw her family move across southern Ontario over and over, from town to town, and then herparentsseparated. Eventually, Hogg was sent to livewithrelatives.

Moving around was a pattern forHogg.

"I had36 different addresses in the first 34 years of mylife."

Not surprisingly, Hogg struggled in school. But there was something else going on.

"Icouldn't pass things, but I kept trying."

Hogg never earned her high school diploma, but over the years she enrolled in a number of college and university courses nonetheless.She rarely passed.

Betty Hogg in 1989 at the top of Ben Nevis mountain in Scotland.
Hogg in 1989 at the top of Ben Nevis mountain in Scotland. 'I was backpacking for six months alone in the U.K.,' she says. (Submitted by Betty Hogg)

Feminism and travel

By the mid-1970s, Hogg, while living in St. Catharines, had begun listening with interest toLaura Sabia, a one-time city councillor who hosted a radio show, in which she advocated for the rights of women. Sabia's work resulted in the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada in 1967.

"She had a talk show every morning, and she started having all these discussions about women, and women's rights and what we should know," said Hogg. "Boy, did my attitude change.

"I just started speaking up for myself. I said, 'I'm not being a doormat anymore,'" said the self-described free spirit, who has often taken off on adventures around the world.

One of Hogg'sthree daughters, Amy, said,"I grew up knowing I didn't have a 'conventional'mother. As a result, I had many adventures that none of my friends were lucky enough to experience.

"She led by example, and inspired me to dream big and be independent."

Diagnosis changes life

In her 70s, Hogg learned of a group for seniors with ADHD. From everything Hogg had heard about the disorder, the groupseemed like a good fit.

Betty Hogg outside her cabin in Port Albert, Ont., north of Goderich. At 89, Betty still spends much of the year at the cabin, which does not have running water.
Hogg outside her cabin in Port Albert, Ont., north of Goderich. At 89, she still spends much of the year at the cabin, which does not have running water. (Submitted by Betty Hogg)

"I went to the meeting and within15 minutesI was with all these people that were totally like me," said Hogg, who lives part of the year in a cabin without running water on the shores of Lake Huron, north of Goderich, Ont."I had never experienced that.

"I was always the odd one. I couldn't learn.I couldn't memorize. I couldn't do spelling. I can't do math," she said."Can you imagine the excitement when I found [that group]at 78?

"I can sit down now and not feel guilty."