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I don't believe it's the same on everyone. I've had mine since I can remember.. It feels neurological to me. My thoughts just move too fast and I have to take a breathe a slow myself down to get the w...
When did I start stuttering: at age 3 Why didn't I outgrow it: I think because I made it into a habit to evaluate my stuttering during a block, for example anticipatory fear like "I can't breathe out...
**"i also don’t stutter when singing. (because it’s a song and there’s a rhythm?)"** I think stutterers stutter (more) when talking to people, because they evaluate (say: perceive / associate) a stut...
i’ve just tried to get a gauge of what words i need to avoid, or just any sounds, anything like that, but nothing ever works. it’s always random. the one thing that i have worked out is just that it g...
>i’ve tried working out a pattern or something along those lines, nothing ever works. Could you enlighten me what your detailed pattern is and what you tried? Where did you get stuck and what did ...
i haven’t gone too in depth, but my stutter is weird. i’ll just use substitute words, and i know i’m about to stutter when i lose my memory. when that happens, i tend to talk faster, thinking it’ll pu...
It is. My stuttering runs in waves when I stutter particularly hard. Periods lasting a week or two. These mushrooms stopped the waves....
I gotta give it to the AI.. very apt description. It is truly frustrating when I can do well on a day and completely crash & burn the next ☠️...
I think attributing all of his flubs/incoherent sentences/whatever you want to call it to either JUST old age or JUST a stutter is wrong. Its a mixture of both. Personally, I believe I have a seen a f...
My stutter is not consistent. Just because I am more fluent one day does not mean that I can be that fluent all of the time. My level of dysfluency is impacted by stress, sleep, hormonal changes, and ...
Part of it could be old age but this has been discussed multiple times on Reddit. Apparently he has always had a minor stutter but could be just cause he’s feeling flustered....
Furthermore, I think we also anticipate because of looped conditions we set on ourselves as a speaking habit. Let's take an example: why do you think we do repetitions and blockings in the first place...
Totally agree! Blocks are a severe form of repetitions. Suppose we repeat for example: mir - mir -mir -mirror. What would happen if we tried to continue speaking after the letter 'r' (of the word mirr...
does the frequency of your stutter change with different people?
does the frequency of your stutter change with different people? so i’ve always had a stutter and i still struggle with it often. recently i’ve realized when i speak to my partner i don’t stutter as o...
There could be a multitude of reasons: * maybe you got an instant stutterfree flow of words because you didn't perceive stutter triggers * Maybe you didn't justify or anticipate stopping articulators...
"Is it possible that stuttering only happens in one place and not at another?" * Yes! This is because we perceive triggers (i.e. situations, letters or conditions) as a justification or anticipation ...
Stuttering isn’t tied to location per se, more tied to the associations and memories created in said location. Positive or neutral social experiences with a location could result in more fluency becau...
Location?
Location? Hey guys. I’m 16 and I’m from Chicago. My whole life I stuttered. I even remember the worse days from 8 years ago. Basically, I took a trip to Texas in April for spring break. When I got the...
I’m not sure why this happens
I’m not sure why this happens Like the tittle says I don’t know why this happens so around early may I started stuttering like a lot out of nowhere every-time I would say something it was just a hot m...
I have been thinking about the same a lot last few weeks. Maybe I stutter only because I can’t articulate properly? Maybe I’m just stressed out and want to get the words out quickly, which result in m...