Easy Trick | Get Your Words Out | Aphasia | Loud + Clear with Parkinson's

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  • Опубликовано: 3 май 2022
  • It seems too simple, but if you’ll remember to take a breath before you speak to anyone, anytime, you can calm your mind enough to help your words come out better with Aphasia! This ALSO ESPECIALLY HELPS if you get off track while trying to speak, and HELPS FOCUS your mind so you can intentionally remember to be LOUD + CLEAR with Parkinson’s!
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    #aphasia #Parkinsons #strokerecovery #braininjuryrecovery
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Комментарии • 49

  • @charlesarringtonjr.8109
    @charlesarringtonjr.8109 5 месяцев назад +4

    I'm a stroke survivor and the feeling of not being able to get my words out as I did before my stroke is frustrating beyond words. I explain it as having a bunch of words all trying to come out at once and having to pick through the jumble to find the appropriate one to use. Sounds a whole lot easier than it is. Thank you for this. I'm going to use this.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  5 месяцев назад

      Charles, this is a very good explanation. I hear this A LOT from people I get to work with. I can't imagine how frustrating it must be. I see this trick work every single day. So much so, that we are adding a special mediation session each week for everyone in classes. I know it can help you, too!

  • @masonwabemantewu5832
    @masonwabemantewu5832 8 месяцев назад +3

    I'm a stroke survivor (1 year 8 months) has impacted my ability to communicate verbally with others. Thanks, I'm gonna try this out at home, maybe it will help with my aphasia.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  8 месяцев назад +2

      Of all the things we do, THIS is THE MOST help! Yes please try!

  • @sugarbaby685
    @sugarbaby685 7 месяцев назад +2

    I have ALS/Lou Gehrig's. I'M 55 years old. These exercises you have here, helps me tremendously. I know my fate. But thank you for helping others as well. Thank you so much!!!

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  7 месяцев назад +1

      I am SO pleased you found this channel and that it is helping! More on the way and I take requests 😉​.

    • @cindymobley8926
      @cindymobley8926 3 месяца назад

      Praying for you. My adopted brother had ALS.

    • @sugarbaby685
      @sugarbaby685 3 месяца назад

      @@cindymobley8926 He's in my thoughts and prayers.

  • @StarOasis26
    @StarOasis26 Год назад +2

    Thank you for helping I can really see your are passionate about aphasia and I'm so glad I found you.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад +1

      I am very glad you found me too! I read your tip about using the wooden spatula to move your tongue around to strengthen it. I am impressed! I am trying to picture it- I may have to try it to I can understand better, so I can share it with people I work with who could benefit. Thank you SO MUCH 🙏 👍 !

  • @lucianacosta3904
    @lucianacosta3904 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for your gorgeous video ❤

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for writing this 🙏​🩷​. I hope it's helpful 🤞​

  • @todayhappy
    @todayhappy 9 месяцев назад +1

    素晴らしいと思います。やってみますね!

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  9 месяцев назад +1

      I hope this helped you!

  • @hautecouturetv4726
    @hautecouturetv4726 Год назад +2

    Thank you for all the tips supporting regaining speech after stroke

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад +3

      You are very welcome! I hope they are helpful! Thank you so much for commenting!

    • @hautecouturetv4726
      @hautecouturetv4726 Год назад +1

      @@beyondhighc it is my pleasure. You give so much hope

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад +1

      @@hautecouturetv4726 well that makes my day, thank you 🙏. Helping people know they can improve is a big goal I have 😀​👍🗣

  • @themothertrucker490
    @themothertrucker490 7 месяцев назад +1

    This will be good for my brother, he had a stroke that affected his speaking

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  7 месяцев назад

      Yes! This has been a help to many, many stroke survivors I’ve worked with and I hope your brother will try it and really make use of it 🙏🗣️👍

  • @rusianam8920
    @rusianam8920 9 месяцев назад +1

    Wow. It’s work for me. Thanks

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  9 месяцев назад

      Oh this makes me so happy to hear! Thank you for telling me!

  • @taniadorley4419
    @taniadorley4419 Год назад

    Love the scoop idea. Very helpful. Thank you

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад +1

      Tania! I am so so glad that's helpful! Thank you so much for your comment and for watching 🙏

  • @faisalahmad3309
    @faisalahmad3309 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks . Appreciate u

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  9 месяцев назад +1

      I appreciate you too. Thank you so much for this comment 🙏.

  • @routieramroop2369
    @routieramroop2369 6 месяцев назад +2

    I am going to try that

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  6 месяцев назад

      I hope you do try it and I hope it helps 🤞​

  • @tammylee1270
    @tammylee1270 2 года назад +2

    I'm going to try this, because I have aphasia from a stroke.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  2 года назад +1

      Okay Tammy! Very good! I bet it will help! Let me know 🧡​

  • @margaretflack2091
    @margaretflack2091 Год назад +1

    Thank you

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад

      I hope it is helpful Margaret :)

  • @TheBlackCat1337
    @TheBlackCat1337 8 месяцев назад

    I'm a torture (years) (lead torturer said he was going to break me and make me schizophrenic), hundreds of TBI's, trauma, been 23 months since then and I think I'm getting to the point that I can work on speaking. I need too, since I have yet to get any real help with all these issues.
    I tried talking to a doctor, but my memory and the trauma makes it hard to calm down.
    Since my first blows to the head I have had this issue of not being able to access memories and bring them to voice. I just get stuck then convulse/shake hard and start to pass out. There are time I'm able to do it, but it results in a migraine or severe headache for over a day from answering a single question. My brain just collapsed during recovery and I had to relearn everything, alone, like I was a newborn.
    I'm noticing now that I can have a somewhat engaging short conversation with a person, but still suffer from aphasia. By engaging I mean acting like I'm keeping up and being able to add a small, more simplified version of my response about the subject while forgetting words and dealing with PTSD triggers.
    I hope soon I can tell a doctor my symptoms and call the cops. That has been my two goals since sept 2022. But it's hard since I was told they will stab me if I try to help myself. So I have that also affecting my anxiety and stress (they are still near me keeping an eye and monitoring me). Also the trauma symptoms and brain injuries are making it hard since I can barely feed myself, let alone do basic care.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  8 месяцев назад +1

      I am so sorry you are stuggling + the very best advice I could give you speech-wise and in general is to take a breath - close your eyes and find calm for 5 seconds when things get crazy. I am glad you found my channel 🙏​.

    • @TheBlackCat1337
      @TheBlackCat1337 8 месяцев назад

      @@beyondhighc thank you. everything is new again for skills and I'm getting better to the point now I'm not stuck in dilirium. for 9 months straight I had about 4seconds of memory and that still is messing me up.
      When I tried three attempts to get help from a doctor when I first tried to get help I had semantic paraphasia and could barely keep three of those words in my head long enough to write them down but when I did I would get lost and forget where I was writing it. I think I tried three times and kept on losing them after I put them on paper or on my phone. I was able to get the words out on concussion but after that I was unable to keep up with anything and when I was being asked questions I couldn't say the word yes. the only response I knew how to say was no. "I'm going to refer you to a nose and ear doctor." me: "no".
      For 11 months now, I have been working on typing and regaining words I lost and getting to a grade fours level of communication skills (the time I had my first concussion). I could usually say Hi and basic responses due to it not being descriptive ect. But after that still is my issue. I need practice but the other injuries make it hard to even get a time of day to go do it. Not being able to plan, low impulse and having lost all my emotions like my other skills makes for a strange multilayered road block among many other symptoms clogging brain.
      Thanks for the response. I'm trying to learn how to come up with a speech that doesn't use memory but gives enough information that I can get help.
      Best I can do since answering questions just puts me in a spiral.
      I have to preplan future interactions. Anything spontaneous or I have no experience in, like medical and the law, is very very hard.
      The breathing method makes sense and I'm gonna try to get some practice in it and hopefully I can use it soon.
      Having a computer helps a lot. Just need to work on my new less than two old neural path ways while trying to navigate the world that isn't at a 2 year olds level of skill.

  • @Xofi7
    @Xofi7 17 дней назад

    ❤ kiersten !!!!!!!!!

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  17 дней назад

      We must know eachother? 😎

  • @Entertaimnment
    @Entertaimnment 9 месяцев назад +1

    I did not suffer from strok as I remember but I am suffering aphasia I have speech production problem what treatment is for me plz

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  9 месяцев назад

      Have you been to a speech therapist? They are the experts for speech production. There are many ways we can help too at beyondhighc.com/

  • @Dukes9797
    @Dukes9797 4 месяца назад +1

    Hi, I can't talk my voice and My voice is Aphasia and I am shy man

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  4 месяца назад

      You can't talk at all Brian?

  • @SmokeyKeitaTEACH
    @SmokeyKeitaTEACH Год назад +1

    1:35
    2:50
    4:07

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад

      I will look at these places in the video in case- I welcome your comments 👍

    • @SmokeyKeitaTEACH
      @SmokeyKeitaTEACH Год назад +1

      @@beyondhighc
      Thank you for giving me some techniques to use for my brother, whose has a brain injury with residual expressive aphasia.
      I am going to share your videos with the memory care unit that he is staying at this time.
      You are such a powerful giving spirit, as a former Nurse believe me you are just beautiful doing what you are doing.
      You have a great program, and thank you so much, because I also have a non verbal autistic grandson. Who I know he can talk, because he's done it in front of me, and what you are doing here may connect to those type of diagnosis as well.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад +1

      @@SmokeyKeitaTEACH Wow thank you so so much for that. It means a lot that you would say those things. I appreciate you sharing and I see what you mean- the possiblity of this being useful for the situations you described. Thank you very much  🙏 .

  • @adorejah3688
    @adorejah3688 2 года назад

    I can’t find videos that plainly teach everyday words to stroke victims.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  2 года назад +2

      oh! I am grateful you wrote this- I could make some. What words would be good to start with ?

  • @edhansen876
    @edhansen876 Год назад +9

    Like the videos but please don't spend so much time talking about the video. Just get to it. Okay? Thanks.

    • @beyondhighc
      @beyondhighc  Год назад +1

      Thanks for your feedback Ed. Working on that yes!