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yeah, I actually ran into her a couple years back and made sure she knew how much she helped me. She was definitely a rare person! ...
You're going to learn a lot about what stuttering is the first session, which is going to change everything going on in your head. You will love it. The therapist is genuinely interested in helping ...
Hey there, SLP grad student here who has a particular love for working with fluency folks! Don't be nervous - everyone's comments here are right on the money. SLPs really do want to help you and most...
In middle school I would get out of p.e. once a week (changed to BIM, a class where you learn about word, powerpoint, etc, in 8th grade) and in 6th and 7th grade it was a group meeting with 2 other pe...
Rapport is it because it basically applied to everything else we did. When going over strategies, we would walk the halls or sit down in the cafe. When getting me to do the voluntary stuttering stuff,...
>But this therapist was late 20s, just graduated, and very friendly and helpful. This led to all sessions feeling more like an hour of talking and catching up than therapy. So I'm curious, what di...
Who was the best therapist you ever had?
Who was the best therapist you ever had? I had a handful growing up. Some private, some from the school I was at. All were older and the experience did not do much for me. But my last therapist was a...
Speech therapists: the good, the bad, and the ugly
Speech therapists: the good, the bad, and the ugly I'm an SLP who is trying to learn more about fluency and I really enjoy this subreddit. It sounds like most people here have had at *least* one exper...
Chicago. But I got my treatment from a university SLP program in my hometown. Macomb, Illinois. I think one of the most important things as an SLP is to adjust for the patient. For instance, I really ...