WHY PEOPLE STUTTER

stutter

Dr. Maxwell Nartey

Founding Professor of Symptometric Science

American School of Symptometry, NFP

Why do people stutter or stammer, which happens only when talking?

What happens when we speak or vocalize our thoughts? I know there are speech therapists, speech pathologists, and specialists helping people talk more smoothly using detours. This is good, but not good enough, because eventually, a stutterer remains a stutterer. What then was the purpose of the speech therapist? Your guess is as good as mine. Now, the facts.

Speech is a physics problem, nothing more, nothing less. As a matter of fact, the entire human body runs on physics, not anatomy, physiology, and organic chemistry.

Speech is all about motor neurons moving thoughts and words from the frontal lobe (Broca area) and channeling them as air which flows from the lungs, shaped by the diaphragm, continues to release sound vibrations to the larynx, pharynx, tongue, soft and hard palates, until the vibrations finally reach the teeth and transformed into spoken words.

We take speech for granted and make fun of stutterers without knowing what they encounter.

Concretions

When cells break down and must be replaced (cell division), we all produce pebbles, gouty deposits, gravel, calculi, lithiasis, etc. They are called concretions. Concretions are the byproducts of cell division. Since we are alive, no one can escape concretions. They are necessary evils. We either find a way to remove them, or they crush us and become growth factors for bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, etc.

Who is a stutterer?

The stutterer is a person in whom concretions have accumulated in their soft and hard palates, lips, and gums, making it impossible for them to articulate consonants and easily transition into vowels. This makes stutterers pronounce the same sound over and over until they can get over the hump.

Transitioning from consonants to vowels is the stutterer’s problem.

Anger, happiness, irritation, panic, fear, and anxiety attacks are emotional expressions that move more concretions into the larynx and pharynx, making it impossible for the person to get the word out because they cannot start the consonant-to-vowel transition.

Motor neurons

Motor neurons play a role in every step of speech-making. Their only problem is jamming. What jams the free flow of words from the frontal lobe (Broca area)? Concretions.

A mother who does not use Symptometry to remove concretions from her baby will never know where these concretions will accumulate in her baby. We all produce concretions, but where they accumulate is the problem.

Physics deals with motion, and motion requires energy. Which energy do our neurons use? Nuclear energy. We are born with nuclear energy. In other words, it comes with creation.

Nuclear energy does all the neuronal work, using atomic force, strength, power, and speed to remove or subdue concretions from the lingual ligaments. This facilitates the following eight neuronal connections for the consonant-to-vowel transition.

One. The first connection is from the histones to the hippocampus, our memory box. All words, thoughts, ideas, figures, etc., are stored in the genes’ histones (tiny protein structures), and this goes back at least 15,000 years. What is in storage must be retrieved fast, meaning in split seconds. Motor neurons retrieve it.

Why can’t neurons initiate the consonant-to-vowel transition and quickly retrieve words such as book, mother, father, etc.? Pebbles, gravel, lithiasis, calculi, gouty deposits, etc., are in the way and won’t allow the neurons to retrieve and smoothly coordinate the transition, causing memory fog, memory loss, blackout, forgetfulness, amnesia, etc., which stutterers often experience.

To retrieve a word, neurons must be a thousand times stronger than the pebbles and other concretions they encounter. Unfortunately, they lack the strength and power to perform such fast actions. The good news is that the motor neurons can initiate the transition when the resistance is lower, such as when the person is more relaxed.

Two. The second connection is from the hippocampus to the frontal lobe. Neurons send the connection to the lungs, diaphragm, and larynx, but pebbles obstruct their effort, especially the pronunciation of consonants.

Three. The third connection is from the diaphragm to the lungs and to the ligament of the larynx, where the two vocal cords are.

Four. The fourth connection is from the lungs to the trachea (windpipe), which transports air to the larynx.

Five. The fifth connection is from the larynx to the muscles of the lips.

Six. The sixth connection is from the ligaments that shape the tongue, the soft and hard palates, to articulate consonants and vowels as one word. They will speak fluently if they are more relaxed and fewer concretions drift into the fault lines in their palates and lips.

Seven. The seventh connection is from the lungs to the two vocal cords. The air from the lungs vibrates the two vocal cords, creating a specific sound associated with particular words, and generating a mental picture as the person speaks.

Eight. The eighth connection is from the lungs to the teeth for air control to properly shape sounds. The absence of certain teeth affects the quality and timbre of the word pronounced.

Surgery is a complete waste of time because it will never work and is downright nonsensical. Can speech therapy remove the concretions inhibiting the difficult consonant-to-vowel transition? No, and never. Many schools have speech therapists. Are they making progress? Hardly.

Consonants are produced with more obstruction and resistance to air flow than vowels, further weakening the motor neurons. In physics, the stronger the resistance, the weaker the force.

For example, letters B in the book or box, F in female or fox, D in dog or dance, M in man or mammal, P in pot or pentagon, T in the or tool, Q in queen or quarter, and K in king or kite can be highly problematic for stutterers.

What causes these obstructions? Concretions. Obstruction causes a block or a delay in delivering the vowel or silent “h” that follows the consonant.

Anger, anxiety, attention, and anticipation amplify the obstruction, making different concretions drift toward and congregate on the palates and gums, delaying the consonant-to-vowel transition even more. As a result, the stutterer can’t even get the word out, saying Book, Book, Book, Book, Book, six, seven, or eight times before finally getting it out.

The solution to stuttering

Symptometry is the best solution to stuttering because it has particulates that ionize concretions, reversing the trend. Instead of the concretions or resistance being stronger than the particulate, the force in the particulate is far more potent than the resistance. The only problem is that pounding must be done at least 3 times daily, not once, because these concretions are tough and carry higher resistance.

In the future, mothers should prevent stuttering in their children by doing Symptometry’s pregnancy management. Such management allows fault lines to be sealed.

We all produce concretions and give birth to babies with concretions, not knowing where concretions will accumulate. Celiac disease, congenital abdominal hernia, hiatal hernia, inguinal hernia, umbilical hernia, deafness, blindness, colorblindness, etc., are problems mothers never knew until a few months after birth.

Physicians have nothing to remove concretions. Therefore, going to a gynecologist or physician is a complete waste of time.

Since concretions tend to accumulate in genetic fault lines, it is better to ionize them or remove them by electrolytic dissociation, and this is Symptometry’s expertise.

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