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I argue that **forgetting that I stutter** could lead to: * not paying attention on stuttering * not commenting on, overthinking or overreacting to stuttering, but also not on fluency * positive effect is that I don't try to say it again if I stutter, don't try to do interventions like slowing down and I don't tell myself to take a deep breath if I stutter * positive effect is that I encourage myself to speak as much as possible, I won't get the feeling that stuttering is wrong or that I need something to change, I won't ask myself too much questions at the same moment or ask myself too much open questions, but instead of this, closed questions * positive effect is that I tend to aim for natural speech, copy listener's how they speak, normalize fluency, build confidence and discipline like everyone else and decrease environmental stress. These can all be triggers for stuttering * positive effect is that you see yourself in the best way possible - as yourself - without feeling the need to do stutter facial expressions, word substitution (and other secondaries) * positive effect is that I keep breathing regardless of triggers, reactions to triggers or other excuses that PWS supposingly use to maintain the stutter cycle