commentr/stutteringJuly 26, 2025

Content

Yeah it's completely gone. My perspective on it changed a lot since I posted this though. Most people don't know how hypnosis works, it's very mysterious, it's associated with mysticism, however the results are undeniable, so science can't associate it too much with the woo. They can't call it pseudoscience because it was the most effective method of anesthesia in the late 1900s. What makes the wheels turn is belief. Look around you, religion, politics, psychology. The whole world runs on belief, belief makes things happen. To most people, the world appears as if they're a passive observer because media, propaganda, literally everything manipulates what you believe in, therefore impacting your decisions. In reality, you're an active co-creator who is being told what to do. You change your reality. So think, what would happen if you changed what you believed in, just for the sake of causing change? Hypnosis is simply the art of changing what you believe in to achieve results. You're believing in something not because it's true, but because it's effective. The reason why the hypnotherapist didn't work, is because you didn't believe it would work. So the hypnotist failed. Believe it or not, hypnosis is more effective when the other person is unaware, calling it guided meditation or something. Pretty much the same thing, but hypnosis has a stigma from Hollywood. See what I mean by belief manipulation from media? Now you can follow the guide there. But from my experience, stuttering is when you developed the belief you were a stutterer. Possibly at a younger age, or the result of trauma. Your parents or friends call you a stutterer, the belief reinforces itself. What you need to do is meditate basically, but clear your mind and let it wander to when the stutter began. Once you get there, you have to change it, rationalize it, change the perspective of the event so the stutter no longer effects you. Then believe that you destroyed the source. Is the memory real? It doesn't matter. As long as you believe it be.

Themes

Coping & AdvocacyIdentity & DisabilityCauses & Variability

Subthemes

Mindset shiftIdentity & Self-PerceptionTrauma & PsychologicalAuthenticity vs. Masking