Rock Bottom is Oft Where Acceptance Starts

PWS

Step one of acceptance rarely feels “good”. When you compare yourself to someone further on their stuttering acceptance journey, it’s impossible to imagine that they can relate to you. Someone saying “I wouldn’t get rid of my stutter” might even anger you - does this person have any idea what it’s like?

Here’s the thing: they do. And their journey likely started with very similar emotions that you have now. But difficult emotions are a lot harder to talk about.

Accepting your stutter is exchanging one hope for another. It’s sacrificing the one thing you thought would save you this whole time: fluency. It’s saying I don’t think fluency is going to come save me, so now what?

What I can promise: it gets better. And it gets better once you practice acceptance. It won’t be a one-time thing.

I have a lot more to say about this. Thinking about doing a series. Or a book LOL. I also think this applies to a lot of other stuff, not just stuttering. And it applies to parents who want the easiest possible life for their child.

Acceptance will make everything easier. But first it will drag you through the coals. You’ll make it.

[[Image: “Accepting my stutter” didn’t feel good at first. In fact, it felt like rock bottom. To give up what you’ve told yourself to survive? There is a grief there. But healing can begin at rock bottom.”]]

* You may view, download, or print copyrighted materials from Stutterology’s platforms solely for personal, non-commercial use. If you use the work of Stutterology for educational or client purposes, or benefit from it in some way, please consider making a donation to help offset costs of running this platform.
Previous
Previous

No Moment (or Stutter) Lasts Forever

Next
Next

Stop Being ‘Nice’