
Originally posted by sgboy2004:Try to practice reading in private... for go for some form of speech therapy
agree.Originally posted by shan_cai:Practice makes perfect~
Yes. There're people like you. Though communications is a very important part of our life, luckily to speak, talking is not the only form of communication. I know people who are like you and I believe it isn't really bothering them that much? Perhaps at your current age, people around you are still relatively young and tends to be more insensitive. As you grow older and strengthen your ties with the people around you, such a kind of probelm can be slowly overcomed. And it's also believe that the more you're too wary of such a problem, the worse it'll become. Sure you can improve yourself on that problem, but try to be more positive about it? At least it's not a physical inability, so through all mean... WORK on it?Originally posted by i_am_sam:Hi guys. I am a 16-year-old secondary four student (male), and I am self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp. I had one since I was young and people have teased me about it. I have difficulty pronouncing c's, s's, x's and z's, and mispronounce them as th's. It is so serious that people have told me they cannot understand what I am trying to say. I have become so self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp that I am afraid to speak in public now and when I do speak I try to avoid using any words with the "s" sound. This is very troubling. Anybody here have the same problem and similar experiences to share? Thank you.
You r ok......Originally posted by i_am_sam:Hi guys. I am a 16-year-old secondary four student (male), and I am self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp. I had one since I was young and people have teased me about it. I have difficulty pronouncing c's, s's, x's and z's, and mispronounce them as th's. It is so serious that people have told me they cannot understand what I am trying to say. I have become so self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp that I am afraid to speak in public now and when I do speak I try to avoid using any words with the "s" sound. This is very troubling. Anybody here have the same problem and similar experiences to share? Thank you.
i have handicap in pronouncing "r" (pronoun Rrrr). My classmates alway teased me, "what's come after O?" "O, P, Q, Rrrrr...." "HaHaHa!" Very hurt to be teased by them.Originally posted by i_am_sam:Hi guys. I am a 16-year-old secondary four student (male), and I am self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp. I had one since I was young and people have teased me about it. I have difficulty pronouncing c's, s's, x's and z's, and mispronounce them as th's. It is so serious that people have told me they cannot understand what I am trying to say. I have become so self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp that I am afraid to speak in public now and when I do speak I try to avoid using any words with the "s" sound. This is very troubling. Anybody here have the same problem and similar experiences to share? Thank you.
Yes. I know of such people. And like I've said, they seems to be doing just fine? Try to speak more slowly for a start? That should help at least a bit?Originally posted by i_am_sam:I also have difficulty pronouncing l's and r's, mispronouncing them as w's. Therefore I will say "thingapore" instead of "singapore" and "wight" instead of right". I think it is because of so many articulation problems that people have told me that they cannot understand what I am trying to say. It is embarrassing when people keep on asking me to repeat what I have just said. Some people do not even listen to me and ignore me. Oral presentations are the worst because people either keep on asking me what I am trying to say or laugh. I have tried practising but I just cannot change the way I speak. Anybody here know of other people in the same boat?
no worries boy...just be proud of yourself,nobody is perfect in this world,they may laugh at u but maybe they didn't realise that they have some thing worse than your pronouncation,so just live up with your life and be happyOriginally posted by i_am_sam:Hi guys. I am a 16-year-old secondary four student (male), and I am self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp. I had one since I was young and people have teased me about it. I have difficulty pronouncing c's, s's, x's and z's, and mispronounce them as th's. It is so serious that people have told me they cannot understand what I am trying to say. I have become so self-conscious and frustrated about my lisp that I am afraid to speak in public now and when I do speak I try to avoid using any words with the "s" sound. This is very troubling. Anybody here have the same problem and similar experiences to share? Thank you.