STAMMERING AND STUTTERING : CHAPTER VIII
THE EFFECTS ON THE BODY
The effect of stammering or stuttering
upon the physical structure is problematical.
In some cases examined, a noticeable lack of vitality
has been found, together with an almost total loss
of active appetite, a marked inclination toward insomnia
and a generally debilitated condition resulting from
the nervous strain and continued fear brought on by
the speech disorder.
In other cases, it has been found
that the health was but little affected and that there
was no marked departure from normal.
The physical condition of the stammerer
is the result of many factors. If plenty of fresh
air and exercise is supplied, and the mind is well-employed
so that the worry over the trouble does not disturb
the stammerer, then the chances for being in a normal
physical condition are good.
On the other hand, the boy of studious
disposition, who is somewhat of a bookworm, keeps
close to the house and does not play with other children
of his age, will probably find time for much introspection,
and on this account, as well as on account of the lack
of fresh air and exercise, will probably be in a physical
condition that of itself demands careful attention.
It has been found in examinations
of stammerers and stutterers, however, that they are
usually of below normal chest expansion and that the
health, while not particularly bad, is subject to a
great improvement as a result of the proper treatment
for stammering.
Charles Kingsley, the noted English
divine and writer, and himself a stammerer many years
ago, has the following to say regarding the effect
of stammering on the body: “Continual depression
of spirit wears out body as well as mind. The
lungs never act rightly, never oxygenate the blood
sufficiently. The vital energy continually directed
to the organs of speech and there used up in the miserable
spasm of mis-articulation cannot feed the
rest of the body; and the man too often becomes thin,
pale, flaccid, with contracted chest, loose ribs and
bad digestion. I have seen a boy of twelve stunted,
thin as a ghost and with every sign of approaching
consumption. I have seen that boy a few months
after being cured, upright, ruddy, stout, eating heartily
and beginning to grow faster than he had ever grown
in his life. I never knew a single case in which
the health did not begin to improve then and there.”