Tongue twisters while stuttering!!!

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
  • Me saying tongue twisters using my hard (or feared) sounds, per subscriber request!!

Комментарии • 94

  • @moraesronaldo98
    @moraesronaldo98 4 года назад +7

    It's like a beatbox, I loved the remix.
    Amazing. I was super stuter but I trying to concentrate more when I am speaking and combining with my breathing. I got a good improvement like 97%.

  • @ahyperdoc
    @ahyperdoc 6 лет назад +5

    My biggest trouble is with the letter "D" which is unfortunate since I'm a D-octor. Addressing patients can be a nightmare where I tend to either lock on the beginning of the word for a time: "Hello, I'm Daaaaaaaaaah-ctor Small" or repeat in rapid succession: "Hello, I'm Da Da Da Da Da Da Da Da Doctor Small." Besides being embarrassing, it also can make me look less intelligent and less capable as a provider to first time patients. You are quite the inspiration Tiffani, keep up the good fight and thank you for your posts.

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  6 лет назад +4

      Thanks for sharing your struggle. I can definitely relate to the things you're saying. Stop sounds (sounds like "d", "t", "p", "b", "g", and "k") can be so hard because we can't use most of the fluency strategies to try to get through it. The best thing I've found is to voluntary stuttering easily on those hard sounds. It still makes it clear you stutter but if you advertise to your patients (just telling them you stutter and maybe making a comment that you can do your job just as well as someone who wouldn't if that's concern) that can make you feel empowered and get rid of the elephant in the room. I know it's hard because of society and how they might view us as less than them but it can also make them relate to us because it makes us more real. I have the same worry though with my clients. I worry that clients and/or parents won't trust me since I'm a speech therapist yet I don't speak perfectly...

    • @ahyperdoc
      @ahyperdoc 6 лет назад +2

      @@tiffanikittilstved1340 I have a private video that I'd like to send you if that's alright, but can't figure out a way to do it here on RUclips without being an invited friend. Can you think of an alternate means of forwarding it to you? If you're creeped out by this just ignore this message. Wishing you the best. Take care.

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  6 лет назад +1

      Hi Raymond, you can email me the video. My email is tkittilstved@gmail.com. I don't always respond to emails from youtube as I try to keep these platforms separate but in this case, that's alright. :)

    • @shubhamkumarsingh3404
      @shubhamkumarsingh3404 5 лет назад

      Sir I had also stammering problem but After treatment of Dr sanjay Kumar mishra my stammering problem is 100% permanently & naturally cured .......if your stammering problem is cured then you can speak any word without any problem .....
      Dr sanjay kumar mishra developed Ayurvedic madicen after experiment of 10 year........
      I am also taken treatment from him & now iam naturally cured please contact to me 9511672468

  • @brendancarmichael5597
    @brendancarmichael5597 4 года назад +6

    4:51 This is my favorite letter sound that you’re having a hard time with because it sounded like you were singing something.😂

  • @satveerclass6660
    @satveerclass6660 4 года назад +9

    God bless you

  • @hanianisa4488
    @hanianisa4488 4 года назад +3

    Proud of youu❤️

  • @trendytrends-ei4zp
    @trendytrends-ei4zp 3 года назад +2

    I also stammer
    It's so difficult to speak in public as ur doing
    Ur doing so well and how u started this confidence so that I can also get 🙄

  • @randheerbharti2936
    @randheerbharti2936 3 года назад +3

    Respect 😭🏆🏆

  • @christophervolosy7100
    @christophervolosy7100 4 года назад +7

    Do you 'see' the entire word (like 'mimosa') in your head while you are trying to say it? Or does your mind only 'see' the m-m-m-m as you stutter?

  • @thrust1621
    @thrust1621 7 лет назад +9

    Hey Tiff can you read a chapter from your favorite book?

  • @Bluesboy-vo6ir
    @Bluesboy-vo6ir 4 года назад +1

    No one:
    Me: start those engines folks

  • @johnnydean
    @johnnydean 4 года назад +2

    You’re awesome.

  • @inspirationalVideoChannel
    @inspirationalVideoChannel 4 года назад +4

    I have self cured my Stammering by 95% by doing some breathing exercises
    Plz advise if need some tips

  • @salehabdulrahman013
    @salehabdulrahman013 4 года назад +1

    - I love you, why do I love you, because I, too, are stuttering 🥺♥️.

  • @Griffin09275
    @Griffin09275 Год назад +1

    You’re absolutely beautiful and love your energy I don’t stutter but still have trouble just talking cause my bottom jaw comes out slightly more than my top

  • @gracedwelle
    @gracedwelle 5 лет назад +4

    this is the same as Matice’s video???

  • @christophervolosy7100
    @christophervolosy7100 4 года назад +1

    I've noticed some people with stutters pause before starting a word. Is that because you are trying your hardest not to stutter? Or is that just another part of it?

  • @alifnajmi1997
    @alifnajmi1997 6 лет назад +5

    Tiffani, Do you know where I can find the strange sound that came out when you're saying the *''D''* sound

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  6 лет назад +3

      It's coming out of my nose. This is an example of a secondary behavior, which is basically a product of stuttering. I am blocking but because I'm trying to get through the tension of that I am trying to get through it by doing that weird sound. It used to work to help me get through the block but now it doesn't and it's just a habit. That's how secondary behaviors of stuttering work in general and they are tricky to stop!

    • @zazakally
      @zazakally 5 лет назад +2

      You're a jerk Alif!

    • @alifnajmi1997
      @alifnajmi1997 5 лет назад +2

      @@zazakally I'm not a jerk but I need to learn more about stuttering problems

  • @justa_bidude927
    @justa_bidude927 7 лет назад +4

    I'm actually going to attend medical school for speech language pathology haha I want to help out all the kiddos with stuttering issues :)))

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  7 лет назад

      That's awesome!!! You totally should!

    • @justa_bidude927
      @justa_bidude927 7 лет назад +1

      Tiffani Kittilstved i shall!!! Haha i grew up scared, alone and no one to talk to so I want to teach the kiddos to build confidence and help them see there's nothing wrong with them. Besides teaching them techniques. :)))

  • @rosidahrose2219
    @rosidahrose2219 6 лет назад +12

    l m from malaysia ...i same like u all(stutter)

    • @alifnajmi1997
      @alifnajmi1997 6 лет назад

      Rosidah Rose ye ke cuba upload kat RUclips

    • @alifnajmi1997
      @alifnajmi1997 6 лет назад

      Saya pun dari Malaysia

    • @shubhamkumarsingh3404
      @shubhamkumarsingh3404 5 лет назад

      Freand please contact on WhatsApp' with me .for cure your stammering problem 100% permanent & naturally
      Dr sanjay Kumar mishra developed a Ayurvedic madicen for cure stammering
      Please dear freand contact to me 9511672468 .......please contact
      Lots of stammer cured by his treatment ....

    • @cjay7740
      @cjay7740 3 года назад

      @@shubhamkumarsingh3404 really bro i need cure for stuttering too

  • @hehey8085
    @hehey8085 5 лет назад +3

    Tiffany try to use body language while talking because it relaxes your muscles btw I used this and it helps a lot.

  • @brendancarmichael5597
    @brendancarmichael5597 Год назад +1

    4:41

  • @angelaholt5717
    @angelaholt5717 2 года назад

    Thankyou

  • @alifnajmi1997
    @alifnajmi1997 6 лет назад +1

    Tiffani is Your Younger Brother or Older Brother who is named Wyatt

  • @tiagopereira7716
    @tiagopereira7716 6 лет назад +1

    do you stutter when alone?

  • @arqtice
    @arqtice 5 лет назад +3

    I thought you were gonna say t

  • @MostPowerfulPMofIndia
    @MostPowerfulPMofIndia 5 лет назад +1

    Hi Tiffany I too stutter badly. I am 32 years old from India.

    • @shubhamkumarsingh3404
      @shubhamkumarsingh3404 5 лет назад

      Archana Jn
      Freand i was also stammer but after tretmen of Dr sanjay Kumar mishra
      My stammering problem is cured please contact to me 9511672468
      I know the problems of stammer...
      Because I also faced lots of problems in my life due to stammering.... Please
      After his treatment your stammering problem is 100% parmanently & naturally cured .......

  • @darnellbarnetted.s.3649
    @darnellbarnetted.s.3649 7 лет назад

    Hello l'm a person who stutters. Should l order a Speech Easy ear device to help with my stuttering?

    • @nspector
      @nspector 7 лет назад

      Hi, I'm not Tiffani, but I can tell you a little bit. For almost everybody, if they get a reduction in their stutter from Speech Easy, (not everyone does), it is not long lasting. It seems the brain pretty quickly adjusts. Seems to take from weeks to maybe a month or two. This can be devastating. The company has been misleading about this. Some reps (some of whom are speech language pathologists, I believe) are honest about it; some are not.
      This does not mean that the device is useless. If you use it only occasionally, it can be effective. If, say, your stutter doesn't bother you much in most situations, but is a problem for interviews, presentations, certain phone calls, it may be useful in those situations.
      There may also be less expensive DAF devices available. But I haven't done much research on that; don't know if there's a quality difference that is great enough to make the Speech Easy worth its expensive price. But something to look into, if you still think you want to try this.
      Hope this helps. I'm not an SLP. Maybe Tiffani has more to add?

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  7 лет назад +1

      NSpector, you are right on with what you're saying! This is the experience most people have with the Speech Easy. I have used it before and I personally don't like it. But I think the biggest thing to highlight is the fact that it is NOT a long term solution - your brain adapts to it over time. Some people do use it for short term uses (like a real hard speaking situation once in a while) and that seems to be pretty helpful for them. But you're right in saying that there are delayed auditory feedback (DAF) apps that are cheaper. I have one that I use (mostly for fun because it makes people who don't stutter actually stutter!). Just searched DAF in the app store and you'll find one. I'd recommend at least trying that first before you purchase a Speech Easy just so you know what it's like.

    • @darnellbarnetted.s.3649
      @darnellbarnetted.s.3649 7 лет назад +1

      I will try the app and see what happens. I did took lots of vitamin B 1 which helped reduce my stuttering by 35% but l was very tired. I will just try and accept my stutter and not be so ashamed to speak. Hopefully as l'm working on my Doctorate the professors won't think am stupid if l stutter during a presentation.

    • @livestutterfree
      @livestutterfree 7 лет назад

      Darnell Barnett Any DAF device is harmful. It interrupts the natural way of receiving, processing, storing and playing back the information in a person. It destroys his/her attention, thinking and speaking! SpeechEasy is just one of many LIES coming from a fraudulent industry called “stuttering cure”, which is a multi-billion dollar profit international business. It makes money on deceived and confused people who truly believe that they are INCURABLY sick and require constant “cure” with devices, drugs, methods or techniques...

    • @shubhamkumarsingh3404
      @shubhamkumarsingh3404 5 лет назад

      Hee freand please contact to me 9511672468
      Stammering treatments is avlable in India throw Ayurvedic madicen which developed by Dr sanjay Kumar mishra after experiment of 10 year .....100% cured permanently & naturally ......become natural .....

  • @stevesaff3559
    @stevesaff3559 6 лет назад +1

    So... what ever happened to the BLOCK video? Nothing.

  • @callmehey7211
    @callmehey7211 6 лет назад +1

    Where are the bees

  • @StutterBae
    @StutterBae 7 лет назад +10

    These are literally the same videos I’ve posted. Interesting...

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  7 лет назад +7

      Really? That's funny but also not surprising to me. People who stutter tend to have some similar experiences/struggles. A lot of times we receive similar comments and questions as well.

    • @merriettagirl
      @merriettagirl 7 лет назад +2

      It happens ruclips.net/video/qvIoUNvzHgs/видео.html

  • @SoWeirdBoy
    @SoWeirdBoy 7 лет назад +3

    Fellow Ravenclaw!

  • @robintrowerfan
    @robintrowerfan 7 лет назад

    Are you close to pennsylvania

  • @supergoodmessages6950
    @supergoodmessages6950 6 лет назад +1

    Sister Best treatment
    Plz follw
    Tulasi leaf morning 12 namalandi
    My Telugu
    By Jai Bharath Jai Telugu

  • @livestutterfree
    @livestutterfree 7 лет назад

    What we believe reflects our previous experience in our life and information that others taught us. Dear people who stutter, please, answer these simple questions:
    1. Do ordinary people use any technique in their normal speech?
    REALITY: No, they JUST SPEAK - without any technique or method!
    2. Are normal speakers even aware of what exactly they do during their speaking?
    REALITY: No, they JUST SPEAK.
    3. Who made you believe that YOU need some technique in YOUR speech?
    REALITY: I do not remember. I was too young when my parents took me to a Speech Therapist-Pathologist, who taught me the first techniques.
    4. Do you REALLY believe that a person who has never developed her own ADEQUATE speaking SKILLS can teach them to others?
    REALITY: No. She can teach them techniques only.

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  7 лет назад

      I agree with some of your points: typically fluent speakers do not use techniques to speak fluently, nor do they usually think about how they are speaking. However, stuttering makes it hard for people who stutter to speak fluently. Our brains do not work the same as typically fluent speakers and, unfortunately, at this time, there is no long term "fix" for stuttering. Speaking fluently without thinking about it is not something we can achieve long-term given the current research and therapies. We still do not understand what causes stuttering, let alone anything that could "cure" to make talking effortless and fluent for us. So techniques, while not the most desirable outcome, are something that can help us control our speech when and how we want to. They can be helpful. Of course, therapy also involves a lot of counseling and education to empower the person who stutters and help them embrace their stuttering. The focus is really on effective communication, and that can look different for everyone. Given that this is a focus of therapy, I believe that being a person who stutters does not make me any less of an effective speech therapist than someone who doesn't stutter. If anything it makes me better because I know what it's like and I've learned to embrace my stutter and learn ways to manage it and communicate effectively (both with techniques and ALSO without techniques).
      I hope this is helpful.

    • @livestutterfree
      @livestutterfree 7 лет назад

      1. "stuttering makes it hard for people who stutter to speak fluently" Stuttering is a set of blocks - similar to handcuffs. These blocks also restrict a person to move his/her body (speech organs) FREELY in the way others (who do not have any blocks!) do. And just like after removing handcuffs, after these blocks are removed from this person, he/she gains the freedom of his/her bodily movement INSTANTLY - without "a lot of counseling and education".

    • @livestutterfree
      @livestutterfree 7 лет назад +1

      2. "We still do not understand what causes stuttering, let alone anything that could "cure" to make talking effortless and fluent for us." You are right. Indeed, WE, as a society, have been misinformed and mislead to believe a lot of lies.... Have you ever questioned yourself why so many diligent stuttering researchers and passionate scientists have not been successful in finding the cause and the mechanism of stuttering over so many years? In spite of their massive efforts and millions of government dollars spent on all kinds of stuttering studies, there is still no definitive answer.... May be, it is because of the fundamentally wrong direction that they all have been moving in for years? I know that just like millions of others, you have been convinced that you are incurably sick and that your brain does "not work the same as typically fluent speakers." But imagine (JUST IMAGINE!!!) for a moment, that you are NOT SICK. You have a perfectly healthy body. Your 100% perfect brain functions differently not because of some mysterious physiological abnormality, but simply because YOU are using it incorrectly, inadequately, abnormally. You are blocked, but you, yourself, do not see these blocks. They are invisible to you and to other ordinary people around you. When we do not see reality, we do not understand, cannot solve any problem... and tend to begin guessing about its causes... Then, we begin to believe our own hypotheses. Based solely on our fantasy, our theories begin to "make sense" to us - without any practical experiments! So, the majority of stuttering researchers stutter themselves. They have a set of stuttering blocks INVISIBLE to them. They do not realize that and believe in the existence of an incurable "stuttering sickness" that requires a cure. And they keep researching the cause and the mechanism of this imaginary SICKNESS THAT DOES NOT EXIST IN REALITY:-( No wonder, they cannot solve stuttering...

    • @livestutterfree
      @livestutterfree 7 лет назад +1

      3. "I've learned to embrace my stutter" Yes, our society has done a fine job convincing you that saying broken words is not only normal, but something to be proud of. Embracing stuttering blocks is no different from embracing being overweight or addicted to drugs/alcohol... (Stutterers are also addicted to methods and techniques!) But have you ever considered that not everyone wants to live the life of a slave? Most people who stutter want to be free from their stuttering prison. But it is simply impossible to become free when you embrace your blocks... The solution is straight forward: blocks must be removed by someone who is trained to see them.

    • @livestutterfree
      @livestutterfree 7 лет назад

      4."Speaking fluently without thinking about it is not something we can achieve long-term given the current research and therapies." You are right on! Both "the current research and therapies" are based on the fundamentally wrong assumption of the existence of the "stuttering sickness". Teaching normal speech is NEVER the goal because they believe it is impossible for 1% of SICK population... Long-term or short-term - it does not matter. As long as a person remains restricted with his invisible blocks, he/she will never gain the freedom to move with ease (fluently) his speech organs. One in a thousand, MAY stumble on the the truth by accident after many years of intensive speech practice - IN SPITE of harmful techniques you teach...

  • @pppmmmrrr
    @pppmmmrrr 5 лет назад

    Eres bella Tiff...

  • @nikiloveroblox2286
    @nikiloveroblox2286 6 лет назад +1

    I feel bad for you its realy hard to say stuff and its ok we al love you

  • @anwarkmkm4185
    @anwarkmkm4185 3 года назад

    Iam stammering

  • @alifnajmi1997
    @alifnajmi1997 7 лет назад

    i don't get when she read the sentences

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  7 лет назад +1

      Are you having trouble understanding what I'm saying (the tongue twisters)?

    • @alifnajmi1997
      @alifnajmi1997 6 лет назад

      @@tiffanikittilstved1340 I need time to understanding the stutter

  • @treehuger1978
    @treehuger1978 6 лет назад +1

    My name is Warren can you please say it! I find her stuttering very attractive

  • @alifnajmi1997
    @alifnajmi1997 6 лет назад +1

    4:14 -4:24 My condolences to earphone/Headphone users

  • @masterp-lw2dg
    @masterp-lw2dg 6 лет назад

    its chelsea clinton.....

  • @Ninco1969
    @Ninco1969 6 лет назад +1

    Sounds like a motorbike starting up

  • @abrafi2379
    @abrafi2379 5 лет назад

    I am sssssssssssstuttering

    • @shubhamkumarsingh3404
      @shubhamkumarsingh3404 5 лет назад

      Ab RAFI
      Stammering treatment is available ...
      100% permanent & natural ....
      Dr sanjay Kumar mishra developed one ayurvedic madicen after experiment of 10 year......if you want to cure your stammering problem naturally please contact to me :-9511672468

  • @livestutterfree
    @livestutterfree 7 лет назад

    Tongue twisters make people stutter... How can YOU teach people who stutter when you stutter yourself??? Don't you see yourself that it is the same as THE BLIND IS LEADING THE BLIND?

    • @tiffanikittilstved1340
      @tiffanikittilstved1340  7 лет назад +1

      That's an excellent question, Anna. Thanks for bringing that up. That's definitely been a question/concern that many people (including clinical supervisors and college professors) have brought up. I believe that I am actually a better speech therapist because I stutter. I can empathize with my clients on a level that other speech therapists cannot. Also, I have had many years of speech therapy so, even though talking is harder for me than other speech therapists, oftentimes my ability to use the techniques I teach is much better than yours (because of many years of practice). Being a speech therapists who stutters certainly has its challenges (many!!) but ultimately, I think it's made me a better therapist.

    • @livestutterfree
      @livestutterfree 7 лет назад

      What you believe reflects your experience with many years of Speech Therapy... Please, answer these simple questions:
      1. Do ordinary people use any technique in their normal speech?
      No, they JUST SPEAK - without any technique or method!
      2. Are normal speakers even aware of what exactly they do during their speaking?
      No, they JUST SPEAK.
      3. Who made you believe that YOU need some technique in YOUR speech?
      4. Do you REALLY believe that a person who has never developed her own ADEQUATE speaking SKILLS can teach them to others?

    • @mojopeddler5006
      @mojopeddler5006 6 лет назад +7

      I have stuttered my whole life and have had many speech therapists as a child. Looking back I feel it would of helped if my therapist stuttered too! We could of practiced the fluency techniques together. I wouldn't of felt as much like a test subject. Also having such a great roll model- a adult stutterer who is successful and living a altruistic life, that would of been inspiring and helped with confidence.

    • @tomscharstein7418
      @tomscharstein7418 5 лет назад

      Anna Deeter, could you help me understand why my requests for an opportunity to SKYPE one of your now fluent clients is still not available? If a person is fluent, they can say anything at anytime in any venue, correct? Or do we have contrasting opinions of the word "fluent"?