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The reason why a person doesn’t stutter, or stutters only slightly, when alone is because there is no external trigger. Neuroscience — yes, it is the only field that can really understand stuttering....
I believe it can be healed/managed/cured/reduced whichever word seems fit. Listen a lot of children stutter when there are young and statistics show 80% of them grow out of it. This happened to my bro...
The central problem is: Despite the intention to speak, speaking, involuntarily, does not occur. That is the problem. The only problem. I have two questions for you: 1. Is it social norms that lea...
Yes, you're right, I think it would probably do me good to talk about it. I didn't develop it after a traumatic experience. I first thought it might be related to work stress, but it actually appear...
So a block that literally prevents speech is just someone "speaking differently than others"? Do you think the inability to say your name is a variation of speech? Lets extend this even further. ...
After 45 years of stuttering, I managed to achieve significant improvement. Neurological stuttering can be reduced....
It’s been proven they’re no “cure/ healing practice “ now if your stutter is just from anxiety or some sort of nervousness then sure you could gain a lot of confidence & not stutter anymore. But if yo...
I stutter even when Im alone and relaxed. But I know my stutter is physical. I have a brain tumor interrupting my speech. But I agree with Mobile_Nerve that exposure is best, that way you start to rel...
That happens to almost all of us who stutter. I once read that it's because when you talk to someone, the social part of your brain is activated, which doesn't happen when you talk to yourself. So i...
Stuttering is neurophysiological not psychological. I do stutter when I talk alone but not always. It’s the fact that there’s less pressure when you’re talking with yourself vs when you’re speaking wi...
Neurogenic stuttering typically does not follow the variability of developmental stuttering; usually triggered by brain change (such as by injury or progressive condition). Fear does not play the pivo...
Neurogenic stuttering?
Neurogenic stuttering? Does anyone have diagnosed neurogenic stuttering? What was the cause of your neurogenic stutter? I am curious if you stutter when alone/reading and what kind of stutter you have...
Sorry to hear that! Have you had these violent tics for as long as you’ve been stuttering, or were they more subtle and covert before? If they’ve just started or getting more violent/pronounced I w...
I've had TMJ problems for almost 10 years. Stuttered my whole life. I feel like stuttering makes my TMJ worse....
i remember the day i developed TMJ. i was stuttering long before then, and the TMJ was caused by blunt force trauma to my lower jaw. the click or pop is it that hinge of your jaw unseating and reseati...
The reflex prevents clicking, which is how stuttering appears. I have a job, everything is explained in detail there, and this link is being deleted here....
Besides, when you start stuttering, the clicks in your TMJ are sharp, if they are deaf now....
The clicking creates a reflex that prevents what exactly? A sound? A consonant? Fun fact: many times the stuttering occurs when one is shifting from a consonant to a vowel. Have no problem produci...
I repeat, there are clicks only potentially, because in childhood a reflex is developed that prevents them when speaking, and stuttering occurs. That's all. Why does stuttering occur mainly on consona...
Everything else, the diaphragm, larynx, etc., is most likely only a "consequence" of this, a violation of the perception of speech by the TMJ, and clicks when stuttering, as you understand, are only "...