Thank you for sharing. Our son didn't start to talk until he was three, but the stutter started when he started Reception class as he doesn't like change and can get stressed in school and was terrified of children when he first started in rising 3's and would become hysterical if a child went near him, he was always looking for a teacher to cling to. We have ignored our sons stuttering by not bringing attention to it and we allow him as long as he needs to communicate. He is now 6 year old and is still stuttering. We have found that different therapists are giving different advice, we just watched another video saying not to ignore it, but to talk about it with the child. It is so hard as parents to know what is right.
As a Clinical Hypnotherapist I have found from my research, that stuttering is caused by a traumatic event, between the ages of 2-7. the cause is anything from a dog barking in a child's face, to a child seeing some one get shot! this is the spectrum that I have worked with. So when you put someone into hypnosis you go back to the first time they started to stutter. The subconious remembers everything. Then we do forgiveness and let the memory go from the body. Now when you understand how the mind and body work together, you can go back to the memory, and there is no more emotion attached,. that is when the stutter lets go. And becomes the cure. Good luck in the future. If you have any questions please let me know. Thank you for you time.
My child is 13, he has this problem, I blame myself because I didn't have patience with him 😔😔😔, I'm sorry now. And I don't know how can I help him. He stay away alone in the school and he don't speak with any one, he is afraid to speak with children or in the class because the people leave or lough to him . I m soooory for my English.i try to explain.can you help me please. Can .
Yes, traumatic event may cause a child to move his attention from speaking to thinking. As the result of such destruction of focus, his speech organ gets stuck naturally.
@@nechnech1745 All you need is to be a role model of a perfect speech for your child. Just make sure he is watching you speak with your mouth and IMITATE your perfect speech!
I have a boy of four and a half year.in his four years he is very good in speaking but suddenly he started stutter.he is absolutely fine but he stutter when speak is this normal plz instruct me i m very worried about him.
My granddaughter started studdering. At first it was a normal studder that started about 3 months ago. No ive noticed she closes her eyes and tenses up. Is this normal? She is very fluent, she started speaking at 11 months. She is releaxed most of the time when she speaks.
Thank you for messaging. This is an important distinction - the fact that she tenses up and closes her eyes when there is a moment of stuttering. This behavior is usually NOT part of a "developmental stutter." There are many factors that suggest if a stutter is "developmental" or a stutter that is likely to continue. These are age, family history, how long the child has been stuttering, if it is getting worse and other factors. Since this behavior MAY imply she is getting worse, I would recommend speaking with a speech therapist in your area to determine if an evaluation is warranted.
My daughter is the exact same!! Extremely articulate, she just started to stutter, and then once it got better, it got a million times worse. When she's mindlessly speaking, it's not there, but when she seems more intentional about what she's saying, I hear the repetitive sounds. She's a very mindful child, so I hear it often.
I’m worried, my daughter don’t stammer before, she recite her nursery rhymes fluently, but now before she could finish a sentence it will take her time and is affecting her school results 😢
My 2 years old speaks a lot like every normal toddler, but he starts repeating words and from past one week he starts having ticks during speech. Specially when he speak words which starts from A,E,I,O and U. Like those sounds come out with a tick. Please suggest what should I do.
Only a few people really know and understand the fact that root and natural herbs are the best remedy to cure any diseases or disorder completely . Thanks to Doctor isibor alternative herbs which helped me overcame stammering I’m glad his herb works and I’m happy that my stammering is not a thing of the past
You yourself frequently interject “ah” and “uhm”:-) If a child’s mother or father speak in such a way, their child will imitate their speech behavior as well. Children imitate normal speech behaviors after normal speakers and abnormal speech after abnormal ones.
Actually, it's quite a bit more complicated than that. I am a speech-language pathologist too, and I've not seen in the research that children who are having normal disfluencies have imitated that from their parents. We all, children and adults, use 'um', 'ah', etc. as fillers when we are thinking about what we want to say. It's normal. What we like parents to understand is that there is a difference between those normal disfluencies, and true stuttering. Anyone who thinks their child is stuttering really should get an opinion from a licensed speech-language pathologist who has served many, many children who stutter.
@ After 30 years of experience as a conventional speech therapist, I quit trusting those researchers paid by the system. Their writings are filled with ridiculous speculations and unproven fantasies;-( Just look at the facts! The whole purpose for speaking is to transfer information to someone. Right? Now what carries information? The whole meaningful word only. Nothing else. Everything, but the word is a speech mistake because it doesn’t carry information. It’s similar to writing. Why don’t we write “um” or “ah” between the words when we are thinking what word to write next? Because our school teachers trained us for many years to write words only. We are aware that anything that is not a word is a mistake;-) But no one ever told us that normal (correct!) speech is saying only words and nothing in between. For some reason, today, even speech practitioners believe that it is normal to use meaningless vocalisations between words, while in reality it is pretty abnormal. Well-trained speakers NEVER do this. They add one word after another and never attempt to say a phrase or sentence at once:-)
In reality, people focus on what sound or letter the word starts with only when they want to write it, but never when they say it;-) Each oral word is a whole indivisible melody AUTOMATICALLY played by our speech instrument, which never functions according to single sounds (especially consonants!), but naturally moves in so-called “ringtones” = sound chords. Each chord is a melody of 1 (if it’s a vowel) to 6 sounds that our speech organ produces in its one drop down. Note that these natural ringtone movements of our “speech pipe” has nothing to do with syllables. Single sounds, letters, syllables, phrases, and sentences are the terms relevant for writing, but have nothing to do with oral speech.
Thank you for sharing. Our son didn't start to talk until he was three, but the stutter started when he started Reception class as he doesn't like change and can get stressed in school and was terrified of children when he first started in rising 3's and would become hysterical if a child went near him, he was always looking for a teacher to cling to. We have ignored our sons stuttering by not bringing attention to it and we allow him as long as he needs to communicate. He is now 6 year old and is still stuttering. We have found that different therapists are giving different advice, we just watched another video saying not to ignore it, but to talk about it with the child. It is so hard as parents to know what is right.
You are obviously such a great professional. You know your onions.
As a Clinical Hypnotherapist I have found from my research, that stuttering is caused by a traumatic event, between the ages of 2-7. the cause is anything from a dog barking in a child's face, to a child seeing some one get shot! this is the spectrum that I have worked with. So when you put someone into hypnosis you go back to the first time they started to stutter. The subconious remembers everything. Then we do forgiveness and let the memory go from the body. Now when you understand how the mind and body work together, you can go back to the memory, and there is no more emotion attached,. that is when the stutter lets go. And becomes the cure. Good luck in the future. If you have any questions please let me know. Thank you for you time.
My child is 13, he has this problem, I blame myself because I didn't have patience with him 😔😔😔, I'm sorry now. And I don't know how can I help him. He stay away alone in the school and he don't speak with any one, he is afraid to speak with children or in the class because the people leave or lough to him . I m soooory for my English.i try to explain.can you help me please. Can .
Yes, traumatic event may cause a child to move his attention from speaking to thinking. As the result of such destruction of focus, his speech organ gets stuck naturally.
@@nechnech1745
All you need is to be a role model of a perfect speech for your child. Just make sure he is watching you speak with your mouth and IMITATE your perfect speech!
I would love more information about this, is there a way to contact you? Thanks!
Thank you so much.
You are very welcome.
I have a boy of four and a half year.in his four years he is very good in speaking but suddenly he started stutter.he is absolutely fine but he stutter when speak is this normal plz instruct me i m very worried about him.
My granddaughter started studdering. At first it was a normal studder that started about 3 months ago. No ive noticed she closes her eyes and tenses up. Is this normal? She is very fluent, she started speaking at 11 months. She is releaxed most of the time when she speaks.
Thank you for messaging. This is an important distinction - the fact that she tenses up and closes her eyes when there is a moment of stuttering. This behavior is usually NOT part of a "developmental stutter." There are many factors that suggest if a stutter is "developmental" or a stutter that is likely to continue. These are age, family history, how long the child has been stuttering, if it is getting worse and other factors. Since this behavior MAY imply she is getting worse, I would recommend speaking with a speech therapist in your area to determine if an evaluation is warranted.
My daughter is the exact same!! Extremely articulate, she just started to stutter, and then once it got better, it got a million times worse. When she's mindlessly speaking, it's not there, but when she seems more intentional about what she's saying, I hear the repetitive sounds. She's a very mindful child, so I hear it often.
I'm having a 2 year old, he stutters,but the worst thing is,he is having a nervous break down,is this a sign of autism? Please help or guide me 🙏🏻
I’m worried, my daughter don’t stammer before, she recite her nursery rhymes fluently, but now before she could finish a sentence it will take her time and is affecting her school results 😢
Now she speaks normal?
My daughter 2yrs shouts when talking and she stammers
My 2 years old speaks a lot like every normal toddler, but he starts repeating words and from past one week he starts having ticks during speech. Specially when he speak words which starts from A,E,I,O and U. Like those sounds come out with a tick. Please suggest what should I do.
Only a few people really know and understand the fact that root and natural herbs are the best remedy to cure any diseases or disorder completely . Thanks to Doctor isibor alternative herbs which helped me overcame stammering I’m glad his herb works and I’m happy that my stammering is not a thing of the past
8o% of children will grow out of their stutter. If you want to find the cause, find a good Hypnotherapist in your area.
.
@@randallscott1643 when you say grow out you mean that the eye closing repeating and stretching one sound just goes away?
Same problem here with my 2year child ....How is now your child plz reply and what you do with this for solution ...Plz reply me plzzz
You yourself frequently interject “ah” and “uhm”:-) If a child’s mother or father speak in such a way, their child will imitate their speech behavior as well.
Children imitate normal speech behaviors after normal speakers and abnormal speech after abnormal ones.
Actually, it's quite a bit more complicated than that. I am a speech-language pathologist too, and I've not seen in the research that children who are having normal disfluencies have imitated that from their parents. We all, children and adults, use 'um', 'ah', etc. as fillers when we are thinking about what we want to say. It's normal. What we like parents to understand is that there is a difference between those normal disfluencies, and true stuttering. Anyone who thinks their child is stuttering really should get an opinion from a licensed speech-language pathologist who has served many, many children who stutter.
@
After 30 years of experience as a conventional speech therapist, I quit trusting those researchers paid by the system. Their writings are filled with ridiculous speculations and unproven fantasies;-(
Just look at the facts! The whole purpose for speaking is to transfer information to someone. Right? Now what carries information? The whole meaningful word only. Nothing else. Everything, but the word is a speech mistake because it doesn’t carry information.
It’s similar to writing. Why don’t we write “um” or “ah” between the words when we are thinking what word to write next? Because our school teachers trained us for many years to write words only. We are aware that anything that is not a word is a mistake;-)
But no one ever told us that normal (correct!) speech is saying only words and nothing in between. For some reason, today, even speech practitioners believe that it is normal to use meaningless vocalisations between words, while in reality it is pretty abnormal.
Well-trained speakers NEVER do this. They add one word after another and never attempt to say a phrase or sentence at once:-)
In reality, people focus on what sound or letter the word starts with only when they want to write it, but never when they say it;-)
Each oral word is a whole indivisible melody AUTOMATICALLY played by our speech instrument, which never functions according to single sounds (especially consonants!), but naturally moves in so-called “ringtones” = sound chords. Each chord is a melody of 1 (if it’s a vowel) to 6 sounds that our speech organ produces in its one drop down.
Note that these natural ringtone movements of our “speech pipe” has nothing to do with syllables.
Single sounds, letters, syllables, phrases, and sentences are the terms relevant for writing, but have nothing to do with oral speech.
How to contact you
TwT can be contacted by going to the site: www.therapyworkstogether.com
Thank you!
Thank you so much