Self Improvement with Job

March 16, 2010

How To Eradicate A Stutter

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , — jobself @ 7:51 am

Stuttering is a speech impediment that affects approximately one percent of the population in the Western world. A recent report suggested that seven out of ten people who have a stutter are male. Many of the people who suffer with this form of speech impediment often dream about a life where they are able to speak fluently but will this ever be possible, is there a cure for stuttering?

Since the start of the internet revolution access to information has become far easier. Finding relevant and beneficial therapies for stuttering proved to be quite difficult going back only a couple of decades however now people have access to many different forms of stuttering help treatment at a click of a button. By simply searching on one of the major search engines such as Google for “stuttering therapy” or “stuttering treatments” enable people to locate many specialists in this field.

There are many different types of stuttering therapy available. The most popular is without doubt the one-to-one speech therapy courses which are run by people who have previously had and overcome a stutter. These courses are normally over a five-day period however shorter three-day courses are also available.

There are various self-help stuttering therapy products which are ideal for those people who are unable to attend a speech course for whatever reason. The stuttering therapy DVD is possibly the most beneficial of these products however there are also e-books and audio books for sale online to help people to overcome their stutter.

Despite what various speech and language therapists may tell you – stuttering can be overcome. Many many people have managed to overcome a stutter and you could well be the next.

Stephen Hill runs The How To Stop Stuttering Centre in the UK where he helps people to achieve fluency.

September 30, 2009

The Frustration of Having a Stammer

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , — jobself @ 9:38 pm

Are you one of the many people who suffer with the speech impediment known as stuttering or stammering? Does your stutter/stammer cause you to become very frustrated at times? Have you attended speech therapy in the past in the hope that it would help improve your speech? I have managed to successfully overcome my own stammer and as a career I now help other people to attain fluency. In this article, I write about the frustrations and emotions that people who stutter have to deal with.

When I had a stutter, it created many different forms of emotions within me. I was actually ashamed of having this speech impediment and did not want to discuss the problem with anybody. My family, especially my parents, even to this day are unaware of most of the difficulties that stuttering caused me, during my time at school and in my late teens. Even when I had a really bad day at school, I would not talk about what had happened with my parents. I would instead just go to my bedroom and attempt to forget it.

I also felt quite sorry for myself. I always believed that I was a decent person and did not think that I deserved to have this horrible stutter. There were many people in my class who in my opinion deserved to have the stutter much more than I did, however in truth I would not wish a stutter on anybody.

I was a person who felt like a second class citizen due to the fact that I had this speech impediment. I was not able to socialise with the ease as what everybody else seemed to, and had many traumatic experiences in the classroom when attempting to read out of a book for example.

Even though I had a stuttering problem, I could at times talk quite well. I could not understand why I was able to talk to person A but not person B. This caused me many frustrations.

When I was about sixteen, I started to drink alcohol. This had a major impact on my speech as I could talk perfectly well when I was drunk. This showed me that it was possible to “stop stuttring”.

Speech therapists and negative national associations, have for years attempted to convince me to accept my stutter and have told me that there is no cure for stuttering. How can this be right, if I was constantly drunk, I would be fluent, there is a cure in itself. Of course it is not right or healthy to be constantly drunk but I am sure you know what I mean.

There were certain speaking situations that were especially difficult for me to handle during the period of my life when I had the stammer. Making and answering telephone calls was especially hard for me. I look back now and can not believe that I coped with working in an office environment for six years, at a time when I had the stutter. I remember traveling to work feeling sick in my stomach through the stress and fear.

Ordering drinks and food at the bar, introducing people to each other, attending meetings and job interviews were other aspects of my life which were made all that more harder by my inability to talk fluently.

My advice to people who have a stuttering problem is to not give up, believe in yourself and your own ability to one day achieve fluency. Do not listen to negative people who try to convince you that there is no cure for stuttering. Most of the people who say this to you will have never had a stutter and will have no idea how our brains work.

Powered by WordPress