Emily Blunt and AIS Speech Therapists Speak About Their Journey With Stuttering

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 12

  • @outlaw565
    @outlaw565 Год назад +13

    Thank you for posting and bringing awareness.

  • @ashp__
    @ashp__ 11 месяцев назад +2

    I’m so happy I came across this video. It’s comforting seeing some of my own coping mechanisms, practices and experiences articulated amongst the panel. Great video❤

  • @bpxl53yewz29
    @bpxl53yewz29 10 месяцев назад +4

    Many people think stuttering is just caused by nervousness but like Emily Blunt said, it can be a neurological cause. I read about a man who was in an accident that caused trauma to the speech part of his brain. When he recovered he had a stutter. Also there is research that links GERD, severe acid reflux, as a baby to stuttering due to movements of the tongue not developing correctly.

    • @hrishikeshmaluskar1224
      @hrishikeshmaluskar1224 4 месяца назад

      No, that is not the case. It is not in the tongue.
      Stuttering is a co-ordination problem where-in the stutterer cannot co-ordinate speech and thought.
      If you notice stutterers cannot stutter while singing, this is because the song and rythm is already known (less thinking). If it would have been in the tongue then stutterers should stutter while singing also.
      Also with practice this co-ordination can be improved to a great deal to such an extent, that it goes un-noticed to the average listener.

    • @bpxl53yewz29
      @bpxl53yewz29 4 месяца назад

      @@hrishikeshmaluskar1224 The research reports the possible link. Some causes are idiopathic of course.

  • @mikedon5741
    @mikedon5741 Год назад +12

    In the book Tough Love it says half the stutter is fighting the stutter. Just stutter and you stutter less:)

  • @elizabethsoro3421
    @elizabethsoro3421 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for enlightening me. The advice to be patient and make eye contact and be curious and listen, is very helpful. I’ll remember.❤

  • @JenniferAlivernini-NOAAFederal
    @JenniferAlivernini-NOAAFederal 26 дней назад

    Interesting, we only know of 1 person in the family with a stutter, and that was my dad's aunt. I stuttered since age 4, and I am about to be 52. I was in my 20's when I finally had SLP who specialized in stuttering. I still carry the shame around... and haven't lived to full potential.

  • @MitchelleSaez
    @MitchelleSaez Год назад +3

    Thank you for this ❤

  • @wesrm1
    @wesrm1 7 месяцев назад +1

    I wish I could ask Emily Blunt, "How is it that when the camera starts rolling, it just goes away?" I do know every person with a stutter has a unique case. Some words are harder for some. Some initial sounds are more difficult but for others they aren't. Perhaps for her unique, neurological composition, somehow when her brain is performing memorized lines it bypasses whatever the neurological cause of the stutter is. For myself, I have found it more difficult to speak when reciting text or reading aloud from a book rather than just normal, routine daily discourse. I guess it is just that. Every case is unique. I think I would love acting if I could turn the stutter off. Right now, I know I would ruin the scene.

  • @ArvindShrivastav
    @ArvindShrivastav Год назад +3

    Stammering is worse it take away every opportunity that comes towards you

    • @StutteringtreatmentOrg
      @StutteringtreatmentOrg  Год назад +8

      We hear you. Stuttering can have an incredible impact on your life. Also, support is available from various resources around the globe, and it is possible to be a great communicator, whether you stutter or not.