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i m a 22yr male , suffering from stuttering. please give me some advice or medicine names to cure it. i prefer homeopathic , aurvedic treatment. pleassssssse help me out

2007-01-08 22:43:45 · 8 answers · asked by s.k.t 1 in Health Other - Health

8 answers

Go to the web site for The Stuttering Foundation of America at www.stutteringhelp.org. They have helpful information under "Brochures for All Ages" as well as a book "Self Therapy for the Stutterer." Some of their books and DVDs are available in public libraries as they provide them free to any public library who will shelve them. Call your library or look on the website under "Check your library."

2007-01-09 05:31:29 · answer #1 · answered by Bud B 7 · 0 0

I'm actually a fellow stutter too. My is really bad when I want something out fast and quickly or when I'm nervous. I find it easier when I talk really slow like a robot or something or If I think before I speak for a while.

Try that..... I know it wouldn't help at first because I'm still stuttering but I'm trying to find a speech therapist at my l high school and slow down in speech.

2007-01-10 10:58:34 · answer #2 · answered by Kala J 3 · 0 0

I had a friend during my child hood days, I dont know any medicine can cure it, but a speech therapist can definately. I used to talke to my friend listen to her patiently too. One more thing she used to do was talk in front of the mirror with no one around for many years, this was a regular exercise which she did and today she has no trace of it. She is married, well settled, has children and very happy in life today. You may do the same exercise for the start with simple words. all the best

2007-01-12 20:52:47 · answer #3 · answered by Deepa R 2 · 0 0

mild stuttering is normally no longer a reason to have an iep. it is considered scientific and the new child might get carry of outpatient speech scientific care. If the new child had cerebral palsy and stuttering that must be a diverse questions.

2016-10-06 21:28:09 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Hi I have this problem too, there is not much you can do, I try not to get upset or 'flustered' most people are kind and will let me take my time, those who know me of course are great. Some people can be arses about it; that is their problem not ours, if they are in that much of a hurry they cannot wait then I am sorry for them. Hope you get on well. Best wishes

2007-01-08 22:48:31 · answer #5 · answered by rose_merrick 7 · 0 0

I had this problem very severely at your age. I was obsessed with trying to disguise it and avoid conversations...anything to maintain some sort of illusion of normalcy, even to people who knew me well.
Then one day I just decided to give up. Just accept I can't pass as normal. Forget about it. Screw it. People will react how they react or think what they think, and so be it. That's who I am, why expend such effort trying to fake normalcy?
People who'd accept my handicap graciously and deal with it in an understanding way were the people whose friendship I'd try harder to cultivate. People who were made uneasy by it...screw them, I thought. I lose nothing by not having such people have a good opinion of me if they only judged me on my speech difficulties.
But here's the point...
As soon as I finally threw in the towel and I GAVE UP trying to disguise it, hide it, whatever...and I just acted like "okay, here I am, this is how I talk, deal with it, I refuse to fight it anymore!"...my speech improved (I guess because I suddenly didn't have my anxiety levels pumped up by worrying about what people would think of my talking or lack thereof).
And of course, as soon as I noticed that I was suddenly having nearly normal conversations, it made my speaking confidence improve, and this new jolt of confidence improved my fluency even further still, and so on... like a vicious cycle but in reverse.

22 yrs old is still of an age where self-conciousness is a pretty big factor. High school wasn't long ago, the real world is still new.
Just say "screw it". Admit you'll screw up. Admit you're handicapped in your speech. Admit that's who you are. Admit you're different in that respect from other people, and not in a good way. Admit it sucks. It sounds like admitting defeat, but somehow (at least in my case) that acceptance of apparent defeat is what "fooled" my brain into greater and greater fluency. Does that make any sense? It seems so painful and negative and counterintuitive...but I wish I'd been told this at your age.

Mentally, I finally put the onus on THEM to accept me instead of putting the burden on MYSELF to talk normally (or at least avoid being heard sounding like a certain animated pig), and that's what gave me the fluency I'd never had before. I never actually realized it in these terms until you asked the question, and I had to think this out.

2007-01-10 08:53:49 · answer #6 · answered by joseph_strummer 3 · 0 0

well, there is some herb called - "buch", chew it.
in small pieces;
and say to yourself that you are getting better.

think, before saying;
say small expressions - clearly slowly; confidently.
don't hurry.
it's more about the confidence....
so, build few topics of interest & read more talk more on them;

if you don't know a topic confidently, be it - you don't try to meddle with that - keep cool.
everybody doesn't know everything!!

have condidence - that's best medicine...

many-ques!!!

2007-01-08 22:57:25 · answer #7 · answered by many-ques!!! 2 · 0 0

my brother had same thing, he struggled for bit with it, he went to speech therapist, she really helped him, better than any Homeopathy that was given him before. he still struggles if he's nervous, but he just thinks back to the therapist told him. she told him to relax, think about what you want to say, take a deep breath and let the words come out.

2007-01-09 01:16:21 · answer #8 · answered by michaela 1 · 0 0

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