Its a writing learning disability. It makes it hard to put your thoughts down into writing and hard to to choose the right words so writing things takes longer and more mental energy which leads to fatigue. There's often not spelling things correctly, repeating words, skipping over words that I thought I wrote but apparently didn't, using the wrong words that look similar to other words so I mistake them for the word I'm trying to use, sentences that might not flow well, sloppy big writing, inappropriate capital letters/lowercase letters on words, bad spatial awareness that can cause words to be too close together, slanted writing, and sometimes pain while writing.
I use Grammarly to try to make things better for digital writing, but my physical hand writing is really bad and its hurts my hand after awhile and it takes a long time. Still, even when it comes to digital writing it takes me a while sometimes to respond because I can't always thing up what I need to say even if I know the subject very well and Grammarly doesn't catch all my mistakes.
If you ever seen the movie Joker, Arthur Fleck’s handwriting in his journal looks like someone who has dysgraphia. Not everyone’s hand writing is that bad, and some days are better than others but its a good general example of the average dysgraphia hand writing.
So, typing up the lgbtq+ news and the summaries for the lgbtq+ celebrities isn't that easy for me… and neither is any of the writing work that I do, but I can do it. Some days are better than others. Just some days its going to have to be delayed so what I wrote can makes sense to people. :)