Bojana Danilovic, 29, types on her keyboard upside down in the southwestern Serbian town of Uzice August 22, 2013. Danilovic suffers from a rare brain condition called spatial orientation phenomenon, which has left her reading books and newspapers, and typing and writing, upside down because her brain does not process images normally. While her eyes see the world the right way up, her brain flips the image over. Danilovic says she is unique in suffering from the condition in such a way. Picture taken August 22, 2013. REUTERS/Marko Djurica (SERBIA – Tags: SOCIETY)
Bojana Danilovic, 29, types on her keyboard upside down in the southwestern Serbian town of Uzice August 22, 2013. Danilovic suffers from a rare brain condition called spatial orientation phenomenon, which has left her reading books and newspapers, and typing and writing, upside down because her brain does not process images normally. While her eyes see the world the right way up, her brain flips the image over. Danilovic says she is unique in suffering from the condition in such a way. Picture taken August 22, 2013. REUTERS/Marko Djurica (SERBIA – Tags: SOCIETY)