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At a quick glance, you’re onto one of the secrets of the field about anticipatory stuttering. That’s the unspoken goal of a lot of the counseling portion of intervention, but disclosing that to the client too early can slow down progress. Many clients have a goal of not stuttering anymore, when what they really mean is freely speaking. There is no such thing as a stutter just going away because you learned a trick or switched your mindset. What you CAN do is get out of the self-perpetuating loop of anticipatory stuttering, (thinking you will stutter, therefore causing yourself to stutter) which greatly decreases your stuttering frequency in normal conversation. The decrease in frequency is also a self-perpetuating cycle but in a good way. You stutter less so you think about stuttering less so you stutter less. When people say they “fixed” or “cured” their stutter, that’s what happened. That is not to say that you will stop stuttering if you forget that you stutter. There are still neurological aspects that will occur, and that’s when freely stuttering or utilizing fluency techniques comes into play. I see you give a lot of ways to utilize the research you summarize. I think that’s a catch-22 of therapy. You can’t make anyone do anything or really change their mind. You just provide information for when they are ready to accept it. Providing/creating new treatments can be tricky because you have to let it happen, not force it. Think about the trope of a bad guy in a movie manipulating and changing the way the good guy thinks. It’s never by telling them how to think or change, it’s by exposing them to information and allowing them to create change that is natural and appropriate for them. Best of luck to you!