My stutter is driving me insane. Having normal conversations with people that made 100000 times harder and more awkward. It’s embarrassing as hell and I’m sick of it.
Conversations with most people I have daily are difficult because it’s hard to keep people listening for that long and it’s very awkward to talk to someone the first time as they expect me to have a stutter. It’s so isolating. Ever since I was a kid everyone just to make fun of me for it. I wish I could talk like everyone else.
I’ve lost so many opportunities to my stutter just think about it. I’ll never a telemarketer, (not really a lost) I’ll never be a voice actor, and how many other jobs require you to speak to others?
I can empathize.
Had a friend back in school that stuttered. It was stressful as hell just watching him deal with it, so I can imagine how much stress it would feel like, even if he hadn’t expressed much the same things you have.
He ended up finding some stress relief via singing, and only hanging around people that didn’t put pressure on him.
Cool dude; haven’t seen him in years though. He left the state for college (wrestling scholarship), and doesn’t come back except to visit family, so we rarely have time to catch up.
He ended up doing technical writing, like for instructions and textbooks and the like. Freelance now, or was.
I’ve noticed for some people it’s goes away with age.
Mine went away in my teens, but only after learning to sing. (Vocal training, not speech therapy). It did make a sporadic appearance for the next 20 or so years, typically when overly tired or stressed.
It unfortunately returned as I got older. It’s less annoying than aphasia. (I lie, it’s still annoying, and the two together are calm destroying.)
Yeah, I’ve seen it happen a few times over the years. It isn’t always permanent, but once it backs off, it tends to not be as bad when it does pop up.