Posts Tagged ‘logical’

Why DST Is So Effective

I am often asked to explain how Dynamic Stuttering Therapy differs from other therapies. The short answer is in almost every way. The more complete answer is that our focus is not on how to, or not to stutter. Dynamic Stuttering Therapy shows clients how to produce speech in the same way that normally fluent speakers produce speech. Naturally, if the process for producing speech is the same, the results are also the same – normally fluent speech. This is logical. People who stutter are capable of changing the way they process speech, so it is also possible. There is a clinically proven cause and effect between speech processing and fluency. That is why Dynamic Stuttering Therapy is the most effective approach for treating stuttering.

For some strange reason, until now people have thought of stuttering as if it were a condition that has little to do with the process of speaking. This is unlike almost any other speech condition in the field of Speech Therapy. If a person has poor vocal quality, the goal of therapy is to change the way the voice functions. If a child has language development problems, we search for the weakness in language processing and work to strengthen it, and so forth. However, with stuttering the goal is either on directly changing the speech itself or, alternatively, accepting that “once a stutterer, always a stutterer”.

There are therapies that do try to manipulate aspects of speaking, such as controlling the rhythm of speech, slowing it down, or controlling breathing. However, while in some cases these approaches might inadvertently cause the speaker to change the interactive neural process of producing speech, they do not actually deal directly with normal speech production. Dynamic Stuttering Therapy directly treats the neural network involved in creating speech.

The normal process for producing speech is essentially automatic. Controlling what you will say or how to say it is the antithesis of normal processing. We do not tell our clients to speak slowly, control their breathing, use gentle onsets or other techniques that require control. We guide them to give up control and show them how to speak automatically and without effort.

Dynamic Stuttering Therapy is an exciting experience, because people who stutter see that within themselves, they have the basic ability to produce speech normally. In some cases they even use this ability some of the time. However, because their focus is so much on the outcome, fluency/stuttering, they are not aware of the inner workings of speaking. Dynamic Stuttering Therapy is a process of self-discovery and change. There is no pressure on our clients to be fluent speakers. However, as they develop greater awareness of their way of producing speech their attitudes and behaviors gradually change. Speaking becomes effortless, comfortable and enjoyable.

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Not a Cure, Just Effective Treatment

Stuttering has been a puzzling condition to people throughout time. There are so many conflicting theories that seem to contradict one another and every so often someone claims to have found the magic bullet for its cure. During the early years of my career, I was as puzzled as everyone else about how to best treat stuttering. Knowing that every problem has its solution and stuttering is no different, I was determined to find the solution that my stuttering clients were searching for. What they asked from me was to give them the ability to speak with fluent ease, like everyone else. I endeavored to find a way to do this.

Determination, resolve, and not a small amount of stubbornness forced me to look out of the box to find the best way to treat my clients who stutter. I never intended to come up with a whole new theory about stuttering and a new treatment approach. However, when I took into consideration all that is known about stuttering, including the thoughts, beliefs, reactions and behaviors of all my clients and the many thousands of people I have met and spoken to in the stuttering community, it begged to happen. It became so clear to me that stuttering is not simply a problem of the rhythm or forward flow of speech. These were just characteristics of the speech produced. I realized that stuttered speech was the product of a malfunctioning interactive system, so I studied this system from all angles both in the clinic and by learning from researchers and experts in all related fields. It all began to make sense. In the clinic I saw an obvious direct relationship between the way the specific production processes functioned and the fluency of speech. The proof that the speech processing perspective is the right perspective is in the results.

I have never touted Dynamic Stuttering Therapy as the magic cure for stuttering. It is just that I have found it to be the most effective therapy approach. I have a number of clients who have contacted me more than a decade after completing therapy. Some of them are in the videos on my website. They have told me that the treatment they received in my clinic changed their lives. Not all the clients that I have treated over the years have reached the same level of success, but, as the program was refined over the years, there are more and more clients who feel this way.

I have gotten used to seeing the astounding changes that so many clients have made, but sometimes, when I look back on videos to they way the client spoke only a month or so earlier, the enormous difference amazes even me. Not only is the person’s speech so much more fluent, there is also a change in the person’s overall demeanor. Their facial expression, posture and body language is more relaxed and natural and they have a new found ability to relate stories, argue, tell jokes and anecdotes, read before an audience and lead prayers. I have heard many a client say that Dynamic Stuttering Therapy is the most logical and effective way to treat stuttering, but I had to smile when a 13 year old client said, “This therapy rocks!”

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