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You need to sleep 8 hours and not more than 9 hours. It will help you to overcome anxiety and fresh mood...
Sleep 8 hours at night and wakeup before 7 am. Try 30 minutes meditation for 21 days consistently. (Just watch Your thoughts without any judgement) Try this and you will see the result (inner happi...
Hey, yeah like I said (in my very long message), it's my best solution too. Why doesn't it cripple you anymore now ? Is it this solution or time too ? I feel like the anxiety on my name won't disappea...
>You said: "So if we priotize forward flow of speech over accurate error free speech we may lead to stutter remission." Yes, at least it can lead to fluent speech just like when we do choral speaking...
Yes, I agree, at least for me this is true. After all, my goal is to eventually, one day, hopefully, achieve stuttering remission (and subconscious fluency) - suggesting that I should indeed - as you ...
I would think it's potentially anxiety and stress related even at that age. I stuttered more around family and friends than in school because I talked way more infront of people I knew without the str...
Thank you for your post. Last couple months I accepted my stutter issue although, it started 12 year ago. Struggling everyday but i am trying my best. I think by now it’s not just a speech problem, it...
I experienced this so much - I would just keep at it every day - I’d talk more when I was having a “good” day to kind of makeup for the not so good days. If others realize you can be fluent and then y...
Stuttering and friendship
Stuttering and friendship Does anyone have an issue with making friends with a stutter? Especially as an adult. I know people who stutter tend to be withdrawn, less confident and have more anxiety. I...
It can be. It depends on how it affected your childhood. For eg someone who recieved no support or understanding from family and school could be traumatised by the experiences caused by stuttering. It...
Obsessed by my name
Obsessed by my name Hello everyone, I've been wanting to post this message for a while. I have an issue that you probably understand very well—it's stuttering on my name. It started two years ago w...
I think if these factors were significant, stutter would commonly start at later age. For example, perfectionism or catastrophizing seem like things that happen later than in the age of 7 or 8 when ma...
How do people usually react to your stutter?
How do people usually react to your stutter? For me people don't really say anything about my stutter. It seems like people will look in my eyes more intently or nod along more than with other people...
Great response! This is my attempt to shed some light on the definitions proposed: * **Inhibitory control**: According to my other post [https://www.reddit.com/r/Stutter/comments/18qxg2h/tips\_to\_im...
I think more jobs turn me down due to my stutter
I think more jobs turn me down due to my stutter I've been unemployed for 16 months due to the birth of my daughter. I had to relocate and quit my job and I'm pretty much starting over from scratch. ...
It means also no or less pay attention to reaction of people you are talking. Can be helpful if you are oversensitive…...
Darn. I just become more alarmed by my increase in stuttering when I experience more occurrences when I'm more expressive rather than more accustomed to my stuttering. In my case, berry mild-moderate ...
I've had a very similar problem with work, talking on the phone, and introducing myself to new people. I think it's probably triggered by anxiety. If school is miserable for other reasons, it's probab...
*This is my attempt to summarize the YT video:* **Summary**: (from 1 to 18 minutes in the video) Proactive control: * A = cue * X = target event (e.g., your name) * Response: approach / avoidance ...
Is the threshold defensive mechanism in stuttering - simply a form of proactive/reactive inhibitory control (such as the need to reduce fear, or justifying stuttering anticipation)? Research: "Stuttering: proactive control, brain networks"
Is the threshold defensive mechanism in stuttering - simply a form of proactive/reactive inhibitory control (such as the need to reduce fear, or justifying stuttering anticipation)? Research: "Stutter...