postr/StutterOctober 3, 2024

Can you 'feel' a (possibility to) stutter? I started stuttering after an illness and I don't much anymore, but I still feel like it's there

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Can you 'feel' a (possibility to) stutter? I started stuttering after an illness and I don't much anymore, but I still feel like it's there It was coronavirus five years ago. Melting fever that I should've honestly taken paracetamol for but I didn't have any brain cells to think, BOOM couldn't speak about the instant I stopped having that fever. I stuttered like hell and then I stopped and then I would go outside (outside spoken with negative tone) and then I would start again. But anyway, when I speak on days that I am not stuttering, I still feel like the stutter is waiting, like covid switched a flip in my brain. Or like the solid line my brain used to be was replaced with a semi-permeable membrane, permanently. Anyone else? About 'feeling the stutter' not about covid stutter.

Themes

Anticipation & AvoidanceCauses & VariabilitySpeech & Stuttering

Subthemes

Anticipating StutteringTrauma & PsychologicalBlocks & Stoppages

Codes (1)

propositionality