Content
I'm a 36 year old stutterer and the one thing I wish I would've got more of when I was growing up is positive reinforcement. I never heard my parents say it was OK to stutter and that I should embrace it. Instead I did everything I could to hide it, until recently. Given your daughter is enrolled in speech therapy it sounds like you are already being super supportive so I'd just say, keep it up! There is no 'cure' for stuttering, only the embracing of it and not feeling bad about it is the only way to live with it and not let it dominate your life, in my experience. Also, just as an aside. I tried a few therapies as an adult which were all 'fluency' techniques essentially, which really didnt work for me (I'd spent 30 years coming up with my own tricks to avoid stuttering). I've had around 10 sessions with AIS ([https://www.stutteringtreatment.org](https://www.stutteringtreatment.org)) and its worked brilliantly for me. Their approach is much more about the individual and helping them be comfortable with who they are, rather than finding tricks which help them appear fluent.