For me it’s probably speech therapy and everything pertaining to that. I’m yet to encounter someone on here who is one apart from me (in training).

What about you?

  • Jack_Burton@lemmy.ca
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    9 hours ago

    My tongue protruded between upper and lower creating the “classic” lisp, not the “cool” Sean Connery sh lisp haha. Didn’t even know I had it until some new kid in school made fun of me in grade 6.

    I remember I came home and asked my mum if I talked funny and she reluctantly told me I had a lisp. I asked her to hold her mouth open with her fingers to see her teeth when she made an ‘s’, then show me how I did it. Once I saw the difference I understood to keep my tongue behind my teeth and just made a conscious effort to correct it every time I spoke for months.

    I have an overbite so it was challenging to land the bottom of my top teeth on the top of my bottom teeth, but after a few months it became habit. I’m a freelance voice actor now haha.

    • Druid@lemmy.zipOP
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      8 hours ago

      That’s exactly what you’d have learned in therapy, so kudos to you! Pretty awesome that you thought of using your mother as a mirror for yourself. And you being made fun of, even though rude, explains why you were motivated enough to work on it yourself even.

      I just realised something. In my previous comments, I put “correct” into quotation marks because in Germany there is no /th/ (voice or voiceless), so working on a lisp is more of an aesthetics kind of question because there would be no misunderstandings in German if a speaker used a /th/ instead of an /s/. Assuming you’re from an English-speaking country, it’s also great that you worked on it since your lisp likely led to misunderstandings, right?

      And so cool that you’re a voice actor now. Funny how things work out! Good thing you worked on the lisp, then, since it likely would have prevented your being able to pursue a speaking career.

      • Jack_Burton@lemmy.ca
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        7 hours ago

        Haha appreciate the kind words thank you. I’m Canadian so it didn’t affect any understanding, just sounded funny. Sean Connery made the sh lisp work for him but I don’t imagine he could have with a th lisp.

        English speaking actors/characters with a th lisp tend to be stereotypically nerdy/child like/adorable kid types, characters that are meant to be cute or sympathetic, but not to be taken very seriously.

        As far as mirroring, I’m an artist as well so I learn visually the best. Seeing my mum make the correct sound and then how I made my incorrect sound made me understand completely.

        It’s not something I often think about, but I am proud to have corrected it myself. My parents were looking into speech therapists after I brought it up but I wanted to see if I could do it myself first. I still make a sharp whistle at times which I suspect stems from maybe “overcorrecting” my teeth/tongue placement early on.