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"you're a poet whether you like it or not"
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- Sep 22, 2008
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I was reading the 3 pages that Sapphire posted in http://www.intpforum.com/showthread.php?t=3659 (quality as usual, saph) and I noticed the passage:
It makes sense that the I--P version of rationals would have a worse problem with stuttering, since we naturally can't get into action and are less likely to interact with our environment.
So, INTPs, do you or did you stutter?
I stuttered pretty bad, and I went to speech therapy when I was in 2nd and 3rd grade. I remember being taught to speak in the 'easy' voice, where you don't make your syllables hard, you ease into them. It's hard to describe... I might make a recording of my easy voice if you guys want.
My dad worked through his stuttering, and he's a professional speaker now. There's hope for all of us.
Gestural tics- like stuttering. I stuttered when I was young, my INTJ brother stuttered worse, and when my dad (intp?) was young he stuttered too.And yet, even thought they know some things must happen of themselves, Rationals dread this loss of control. This is why so many NTs turn out to develop unreasonable fears, especially of germs and other forms of filth, something they have no control over. The Rationals Mark Twain, Nikola Tesla, Howard Hughes, and Buckminster Fuller each developed disease phobias, some of them incapacitating, as in the case of Hughes. And speech is a special problem for the Rationals, who are the most likely of all the types to develop gestural tics when they try to take control of their speech. Though it tends to impair their performance, strength of resolve is of such extreme importance to Rationals that, under stress, they have no choice but to invoke their will and try harder.
It makes sense that the I--P version of rationals would have a worse problem with stuttering, since we naturally can't get into action and are less likely to interact with our environment.
So, INTPs, do you or did you stutter?
I stuttered pretty bad, and I went to speech therapy when I was in 2nd and 3rd grade. I remember being taught to speak in the 'easy' voice, where you don't make your syllables hard, you ease into them. It's hard to describe... I might make a recording of my easy voice if you guys want.
My dad worked through his stuttering, and he's a professional speaker now. There's hope for all of us.
