Stammer Your Way to Success


Book Description

I would like to acknowledge the 60 million people worldwide, who suffer hesitation in speech. Limitations are just signposts. They may signal different routes or different ways to reach a destination, but they won't prevent you from getting there, unless you empower them to do so. Ignore them, focus on your journey.'




S-S-STAMMERING?


Book Description

If you wish to overcome fear & shame and speak well, this book is just for you. Manimaran, a recovering stammerer has written this book based on his own stammering experience and the in-depth knowledge gained from interacting with more than 400 stammerers in the past 10 years. He explains the success tools and methods very well in this book to make every stammerer to speak well in a manner that’s simple, understandable and easily applicable techniques in real life. The speech therapy given in this book is an unique one which addresses holistically to all the shortcomings that are largely responsible for stammering speech. This book is intended to inspire you to get rid of your fear, shame, speak well and aim for higher goals which you may have never thought of hitherto because of your speech problem. Get ready to practice with simple but proven techniques that can help you to speak well and achieve your ambitious and achievable goals.




Out With It


Book Description

A fresh, engaging account of a young woman's journey, first to find a cure for a lifelong struggle with stuttering, and ultimately to embrace the voice that has defined her character. It offers a fresh perspective on the obsession with physical perfection.




Self-therapy for the Stutterer


Book Description

Malcolm Fraser knew from personal experience what the person who stutters is up against. His introduction to stuttering corrective procedures first came at the age of fifteen under the direction of Frederick Martin, M.D., who at that time was Superintendent of Speech Correction for the New York City schools. A few years later, he worked with J. Stanley Smith, L.L.D., a stutterer and philanthropist, who, for altruistic reasons, founded the Kingsley Clubs in Philadelphia and New York that were named after the English author, Charles Kingsley, who also stuttered. The Kingsley Clubs were small groups of adult stutterers who met one night a week to try out treatment ideas then in effect. In fact, they were actually practicing group therapy as they talked about their experiences and exchanged ideas. This exchange gave each of the members a better understanding of the problem. The founder often led the discussions at both clubs. In 1928 Malcolm Fraser joined his older brother Carlyle who founded the NAPA-Genuine Parts Company that year in Atlanta, Georgia. He became an important leader in the company and was particularly outstanding in training others for leadership roles. In 1947, with a successful career under way, he founded the Stuttering Foundation of America. In subsequent years, he added generously to the endowment so that at the present time, endowment income covers over fifty percent of the operating budget. In 1984, Malcolm Fraser received the fourth annual National Council on Communicative Disorders' Distinguished Service Award. The NCCD, a council of 32 national organizations, recognized the Foundation's efforts in "adding to stutterers', parents', clinicians', and the public's awareness and ability to deal constructively with stuttering." Book jacket.




I Have a Voice


Book Description

Have you ever wondered why most people who block and stutter do not do so every time they speak? Now the puzzle has finally been solved by this outstanding new book which details a completely new approach to treating this debilitating condition. Bob Bodenhamer explains that this phenomenon results from the thinking (cognition) of the stutterer as he or she associates speaking with a lot of fear and anxiety about blocking. This book both explains the structure of blocking and provides the tools for gaining more fluency.




Stuttering


Book Description




Advice to Those who Stutter


Book Description

This publication has articles written by men and women who stutter themselves and who are now or have been speech pathologists.




How to Stop Stuttering & Love Speaking: EXPANDS ALL EDITIONS of Stuttering & Anxiety Self-Cures


Book Description

THIS BOOK INCLUDES AND GREATLY EXPANDS ALL EDITIONS OF "Stuttering & Anxiety Self-Cures" (which has hundreds of 5 Star Reviews worldwide). There is NO AUDIBLE version of this book. To get all of the author's methods and the latest stuttering/speech anxiety-breakthroughs BUY ONLY THIS BOOK. The author stuttered to age 30, then cured himself and for decades has helped others beat stuttering for free. In the past six years, he has given over 5,000 hours of free coaching to his readers and posted 1,500 of his coaching videos online (with over 100,000 views). He has also posted over 150 Success Stories of his students in his Speech Hall of Fame (on the website of Speech Anxiety Anonymous). An entire stop-stuttering program has been built around this book and can be found at Speech Anxiety Cures' website, which his ex-stuttering students expect to convert into a World Stop Stuttering Association in late 2021. If you pop this book's cover and read "What Readers Say", you will see proof this book gives you the tools that could end stuttering and speech anxiety worldwide, forever. Read the reviews of his earlier book ("Stuttering & Anxiety Self-Cures"), and you will then want to read this brand new 700-page-book, as it provides a much better explanation of the ways to stop stuttering and to learn to love to speak.




Words Fail Us


Book Description

'TIMELY' David Mitchell 'MOVING ... REMARKABLE' SUNDAY TIMES 'ONE OF THOSE RARE BOOKS I HADN'T REASLISED I'D BEEN WAITING FOR UNTIL I READ IT.' Owen Sheers 'OPEN-MINDED, THOUGHTFUL AND WISE... A LIBERATING BOOK' Colm Toibin In an age of polished TED talks and overconfident political oratory, success seems to depend upon charismatic public speaking. But what if hyper-fluency is not only unachievable but undesirable? Jonty Claypole spent fifteen years of his life in and out of extreme speech therapy. From sessions with child psychologists to lengthy stuttering boot camps and exposure therapies, he tried everything until finally being told the words he'd always feared: 'We can't cure your stutter.' Those words started him on a journey towards not only making peace with his stammer but learning to use it to his advantage. Here, Jonty argues that our obsession with fluency could be hindering, rather than helping, our creativity, authenticity and persuasiveness. Exploring other speech conditions, such as aphasia and Tourette's, and telling the stories of the 'creatively disfluent' - from Lewis Carroll to Kendrick Lamar - Jonty explains why it's time for us to stop making sense, get tongue tied and embrace the life-changing power of inarticulacy.







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