fallen
away, the chains are broken.
To know that you are free--delivered from bondage.
What a feeling--what a sensation--
Living itself is worth-while. Life means more. The sun shines brighter,
the grass is greener, the flowers are more beautiful while friends and
relatives seem closer, kinder and dearer than ever before.
The Joy of Perfect Speech!
No words can paint the picture, no tongue describe the lofty feeling of
elation which crowns the man or woman or boy or girl who has stammered
and has been set free.
CHAPTER II
HOW TO DETERMINE WHETHER YOU CAN BE CURED
You can either be cured of your trouble--or you cannot. If you can, why
should you go about hesitating, stumbling, sticking, stammering and
stuttering?
Why should you deny yourself the privileges of society, the advantages
of opportunity, the fruits of success--if you can be completely and
permanently cured of the trouble which handicaps you and holds you back?
Why should you live a HALF LIFE as a stammerer, if you can be cured and
live the complete, joyous, happy, overflowing life?
Why should you be content with failure or half-success if the
triumphant power to accomplish, the masterful will to succeed is right
within your grasp?
Why should you continue to stammer if you can be cured?
The answer is, YOU SHOULD NOT.
The first step, therefore, is to determine definitely and accurately
whether you are in a curable stage of your trouble and whether you can
be completely and permanently cured.
These things you cannot determine for yourself. You have no facilities
for determining the facts. You lack the scientific knowledge upon which
such conclusions must be based. You cannot diagnose your case of
stammering any more than you could accurately diagnose a highly complex
nervous disease. In order, therefore, that the most important of all
questions, viz.: "Can I be Cured?" may be correctly and authoritatively
answered, I am willing to diagnose your case and give you a typewritten
report of your condition, telling you whether or not you are still in a
curable stage.
It goes without saying that this diagnosis must be based upon a
description of the case in question. This description must be accurate
and reliable as well as thorough. In order to insure this, I furnish
with each book a Diagnosis Blank, which when properly filled out, gives
me the information necessary to determine the durability of the case,
as well as to fu
|