Bojana Danilovic, a young woman from Serbia, suffers from a strange
condition that has left both doctors and scientists baffled. The 28-year
economics graduate sees everything upside down.
Experts from Harvard University and at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology who examined Bojana Danilovic say she suffers from a rare
brain condition called ’spatial orientation phenomenon’. In layman’s
terms that means her eyes see things the right way, but for some reason
her brain changes them. Although there have been some similar cases
recorded in history, Bojana’s case is truly unique. Everything in her
life has been backwards, even the way she came into this world – feet
first. Her parents remember that when she first started crawling, she
would always move backwards, and when she began to walk, she did it in
reverse. The remarkable young woman says her mother had to take a leave
from her job in order to teach her to walk like all the other children.
It took a lot of practice, but she finally managed to walk forward. Only
this was only the beginning of a very unusual life.
Bojana’s bizarre problems continued when she started writing. She would
turn the blank piece of paper upside down, start from the lower right
corner and finish in the upper left corner. Her teachers and classmates
all tried to help her correct her style, but it was all in vain. It was
the only way letters made sense to her. Later, she got a job at the
municipal administration, in her home town of Uzice, where her
colleagues were left flabbergasted after she turned the keyboard and
monitor of her computer upside down, so she could make sense of her
work. At home, she has to turn the TV on its head to watch her favorite
show, while her family has to use another one. She always holds her
mobile phone and newspaper upside down, and often gets approached by
people who tell her she’s reading it wrong.
Bojana Danilovic’s bizarre condition first attracted the attention of
American scientists a few years ago. After subjecting her to several
tests they established her brain is perfectly healthy, but has a
different field of view than most people’s. Although they haven’t yet
come up with an explanation for Bojana’s unique brain configuration,
they offered to make her job easier by creating a special software so
she wouldn’t have to turn the monitor upside down all the time.
“It may look incredible to other people but to me it’s completely
normal,” the young Serbian told local reporters. ”I was born that way.
It’s just the way I see the world.” Her biggest regret is she can’t get a
driever’s license.


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