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I've endured a lifelong battle with stuttering. I've done it much more when I was younger than I do now, it does affect my life in some ways, but I think that after all of this time, I just learned to live with it that i don't realize I am doing it. Most people do not realize that I stutter because I don't repeat words, but have trouble getting the words out. I just learned to substitute words that I can get out to avoid long uncomfortable pauses. I also hate even thinking about this topic because I have a lot of painful childhood memories. When I went to school, I don't think counselors knew that much on how to deal with this type of stuttering. I was constantly giving hearing tests (which I hear fine) and put in "low" reading groups because it appeared that I could not read even though I read a lot when I was in school. What do I do at this point in my life? Do I just deal with it? Should I seek counseling or just deal with it?

2006-10-30 08:47:04 · 9 answers · asked by Angrygirl5 3 in Social Science Psychology

9 answers

Consider yourself blessed with a manageable condition...A livable level of difficulty and not an absolutely stifling disability.
The form of damage to the speech area of my brain prevents a word to come out, without it being indefinitely repeated like a skipping audio CD. If I make an attempt to tell my mate I love him, for instance, the word "love" might end up on an uncontrollable rapid repeat loop for over several minutes, as I sit there in a quiet panic, desperately trying to put the brakes on my runaway stutter. Not exactly how you want to express such a sentiment. ...So this has been my life, since age four, when I was the victim of a CO2 leak from a faulty heating unit. I was in a coma for several days and went a year learning to speak all over again. There has been none, and never will be any effective therapy or medication. I am a severely speech disabled person, who must primarily rely on writing or messaging out my dialogue for others. Unless both they and I have lots of spare time!
You asked if you could simply "deal" with your particular stutter. From how you describe it, I am sure that we can both deal with our mid and high level situations "as is" and still come out winners! You have my respect and best wishes!

2006-10-31 19:45:26 · answer #1 · answered by ? 5 · 0 1

I suffered from the exact same type of problem as a child. While I did not get stuck in remedial classes or constant tests because of it, it was defintely something that impacted my life as a child.

As a child, my doctor said I would grow out of it by the time i hit my mid-teens, so i waited for that to come...and it never did.

I hated going to "speech class" in school, because i felt it wasn't for me and it seemed like just another way to get in my head that it was something that actually separated me from my other classmates, while it's not.

Anyways...I learned to deal with it by just making sure i thought about what i was going to say while i was saying it and to talk slowly. I've found that during presentations is when i'd get most nervous and do the worst, so i always make sure i prepare.

Force yourself to do things that make you nervous and make it worse, the words, the sounds, or the situations...whatever makes it worse for you, and make yourself do them over and over until you're used to it.

I watched an interview with Bernie Mac, and he was saying as a kid he used to stutter really really bad in the same way, but by doing that he got over it, and he seems to have.

2006-10-30 09:01:10 · answer #2 · answered by Sgt. Pepper 5 · 0 0

Here are some tips that are located in a book designed to help people improve in public speaking:

1.Identify words that you have trouble with and try to avoid using these words. Instead, use words that have a similar meaning. Also helpful, is identifying the speech sounds that give you trouble and practice these over and over again.

2. Pace yourself. Think the word over before saying it. Then slowly begin to speak the word. After saying the word you can say it faster and faster until you can say it clearly.

The problem will likely not dissappear altogether, but you can see improvements that will minimize your trouble.

2006-10-30 08:55:58 · answer #3 · answered by johnusmaximus1 6 · 0 1

i think of it has something to do along with your point of convenience around others. i'd advise attempting to de-tension and attempt to no longer be traumatic around others. once you recognize you would be around human beings or would be conversing with somebody on the telephone, attempt to coach. working example, you're able to attempt going over on your head stable subjects for verbal substitute, think of roughly what you will say. In interviews, bypass in with the perspective that even nonetheless you recognize which you have a stuttering subject...they do no longer. Make that a favorable subject via acknowledging mentally which you have the capability to make regardless of first impact you desire. working on your self belief and self-worth could help too. you could inspect a speech therapist besides, i'm particular they'd have plenty greater materials and suggestion to grant you with reference to the subject. average, understand which you would be able to beat this. :) I also have a lisp, and earlier once I have been given traumatic my lisp became very substantive. In intense college a counselor instructed me that I had the capability to administration what human beings observed approximately me and that self belief is fundamental. I took that to coronary heart and now that i'm older, no person ever even notices, if looks like I even have thoroughly eradicated the subject. of path, there are few and uncommon events the place my lisp does by surprise replace into sought after, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that, like I reported, that's totally uncommon. :) wish you properly. :)

2016-10-03 02:51:17 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

my dad has a terrible stutter especially when he is mad or nervous . he tries to visualize the word hes getting tripped up on and then imagines he is reading it .it works for him unless all four of his daughters are in the room , because we all have names beginning with s he said that was a big mistake.

2006-10-30 08:57:15 · answer #5 · answered by auntie s 4 · 1 0

when I was little, I stuttered ALL the time. I was 8 years old. My grandpa yelled at me for EVERYTHING and it made me nervous! I talked to my dad about it and he told me to tell him to shut the f up next time he gave me trouble. That night at the dinner table, he yelled at me and said I need to take smaller bites. I said "grandpa, shut the f up!" and I never stuttered again!
Maybe your problem comes from nervousness too. Cussing at your grandpa may or may not help but if you feel nervous, take charge....maybe talk to a speech therapist!

2006-10-30 09:00:07 · answer #6 · answered by katie-bug 5 · 0 1

Well you can try singing songs or reading a loud from books. The
singing helped me a lot.

2006-10-30 08:55:09 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I guess you have to be more composed. Deep concentration must be given to your thoughts before they turn into words. It helps.

2006-10-30 08:58:17 · answer #8 · answered by saintbeng 2 · 0 0

Don't Talk.

2006-11-01 03:48:02 · answer #9 · answered by Hi 7 · 0 3

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