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i don’t really have tips but i realize when i speak to strangers i tend to sit up alittle more and the pace of speaking is different (it’s almost singsong like or with a slight accent). i think the ch...
I have never drunk so I can't say. >anxiety Could be the case but I like to say that my genius brain works faster than my mouth :)...
Don't have any tips, just wanted to say this is my experience too, but maybe not because of familiarity but preparedness. The more prepared I am the more I'm likely to stutter. Like if I'm the one ac...
How it comes about is a fascinating topic to me. I've thought about what happens in my brain that causes me to stutter my entire life. Maybe a good discussion would be comparing older, and more common...
I do the same. Its like all the muscles in your neck tighten and you can’t do anything but make a weird noise or wait till your out of breath and start the whole process over again. Which gets very i...
When I’m in an argument with someone I am 100% fluent, I think it’s because I’m not focused on my speech at all....
I’ll try this out next time but I can assure you that I have a lack of air. One of my worst stutters are ‘who, what, where, when, why, how’ and I can’t latch onto the end of the words. It just ends up...
It's pain, heart to heart honest talk here, I'm a dentist now and ever since I was a kid I was laughed at and bullied for stuttering, I'm a 23 year old man who can't say his own name properly if asked...
Just joined!
Just joined! Hi! So I’ve just joined this sub and let me tell you how great it was to read some of the posts here and knowing I’m not alone with all those feelings. Maybe I will also share my experien...
No worries. Years ago I actually started to consciously think in words, specifically planning how to tell anecdotes because I always felt lost in conversation and having something planned helped. May...
I would say the stuttering is significantly less when I try thinking in words and am sure what to say but I can’t say the same otherwise. But I do agree with you on the many factors that affect stutte...
Well, in terms of converting concepts into words it can be tricky depending how complex the concept is, and being unsure of what I'm saying can make my stutter worse. But even when thinking in words i...
Hmm but does your stuttering change according the way you think?...
I think in a variety of ways: conceptually, visually, musically. Thinking in words is definitely not my most common way of thinking. A couple of years ago a post went viral where someone found out so...
i liked this question. it would be nice if we could turn our thoughts into texts ready to be read aloud...
Do you guys think in words or visuals?
Do you guys think in words or visuals? I feel that when I intentionally think in words then I stutter less when I speak out how I feel but when I think I’m visuals ( like I normally do) I tend to stut...
Great post! You never had a stutter disorder until 13 years old where you then started to block and few months afterwards it turned into a severe form until 26 years old. You experience that something...
The points in this book are definitely pragmatic, I think it makes a lot of a sense. On your 3 points, I used to agree with all 3, but this book changed my mind: Stuttering exists in the unconscious...
Yes, it’s normal to only stutter in one language. I’ve seen numerous people on this subreddit that only stutter in one language, but not the other. Personally, I stutter in both the languages I speak,...
Stutterers vs non-stutterers. Why are there differences in the brain? What do the differences entail? (question to all redditors)
Stutterers vs non-stutterers. Why are there differences in the brain? What do the differences entail? (question to all redditors) 1. MRI scans have revealed that when PWS stutter, there is a differenc...