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Adding another layer to her triumph-over-adversity story, Susan Boyle has revealed that, as a child, she was repeatedly beaten and bullied.
"You're looking at someone who would get the belt everyday," the 48-year-old star told Britain's Daily Mirror.
The reason? Learning disabilities - ones pronounced enough to earn her not only beatings from teachers but also cruel taunts from classmates.
"I'm just a wee bit slower at picking things up than other people. So you get left behind in a system that just wants to rush on," Boyle said. "That was what I felt was happening to me."
"There was discipline for the sake of discipline back then," Boyle told the paper. "But it's all very different now. I think teachers are taught to understand children with learning disabilities a lot better."
In some ways, the treatment by her classmates hurt even more.
"There's nothing worse than another person having power over you by bullying you and you not knowing how to get rid of that thing," Boyle said.
Boyle also has a long religious background, having served for years as a church worker in her small town of Blackburn, West Lothian. That obscure upbringing made her worldwide breakthrough on the show "Britain's God Talent" even more astonishing.
No one was more surprised about her success than she.
"I went to L.A. and there were crowds waiting for us at the airport," Boyle recalled. "It was quite something. Nothing a woman like me was used to. The hotel I was staying in, apparently Frank Sinatra used to take his women back there! And I dipped my toes in the same pool Grace Kelly has been in. This is a world I had never seen before and never dreamt that I would get to see."
But the culture shock took its toll and, after being beaten out in the final round of the reality talent show by dance troupe Diversity, Boyle was taken to the Priory Clinic in central London suffering from exhaustion.
"I hadn't slept properly for a week and I didn't know what was wrong with me," the singer said. "I was in there for three days and I've never felt so tired. But I look back on it now and it was a necessity. I wanted to get a rest, a break without all the cameras."
Now the singer says she feels ready for the onslaught of attention that will surely greet her debut CD, "I Dreamed a Dream," which comes out on Nov. 23. Already the disc is the most pre-ordered of all time.
Beth Haller, Ph.D., is Co-Director of the Global Alliance for Disability in Media and Entertainment (www.gadim.org). A former print journalist, she is a member of the Advisory Board for the National Center on Disability and Journalism (https://ncdj.org/). Haller is Professor Emerita in the Department of Mass Communication at Towson University in Maryland, USA. Haller is co-editor of the 2020 "Routledge Companion to Disability and Media" (with Gerard Goggin of University of Sydney & Katie Ellis of Curtin University, Australia). She is author of "Representing Disability in an Ableist World: Essays on Mass Media" (Advocado Press, 2010) and the author/editor of Byline of Hope: Collected Newspaper and Magazine Writing of Helen Keller (Advocado Press, 2015). She has been researching disability representation in mass media for 30+ years. She is adjunct faculty in the Disability Studies programs at the City University of New York (CUNY) and the University of Texas-Arlington.