The Speech of the Stutterer.

Psychoanalysts have an intolerably bad voice- very few of them could have become singers- leave aside been part of a divine gospel choir; the urge would be for one to enrol in a series of music classes so that to be in touch with rhythm, for desire does not allow one to be a stutterer- that as far as the concern is about the subject called psychoanalyst. The stutterer divulges that the father is still breathing and to be venerated- although this breath exudes poison- especially now that he has been apotheosized through his murder and, truth be told, possesses all the women with the daedalic nuisance of a Midas touch; indeed, the stutterer natters of the name of the father fluently- contained by a different time frame, one that only a singing gale would have enough musical schooling, smooth enough, to distinguish, for, the voice is the modulation of the flux of the breath as much as silence is the absence of that modulation, with meaning reached after the motion since the demodulation of the object occurs before the meaning of jouissance. One has only the duty to have a look, if these matters are visible and not auditory, at the process of apophallation exemplified by the brilliance of Limax maximus– which, with a procrustean chirurgic operation, teaches what it takes a subject a few hundred of sessions to recognise if its ears have been cleaned enough by the atmospheric aura smelled from the place of the analyst’s desire- if not, yet only to reach a different statistical method, some sort of apophenia but based on signifiers, which analysts like to discuss among themselves having the impression of a cure, instead of magic that they do not, and they should not, appreciate- and here is where the speech of the stutterer sounds melodious to those who do not practice a psychotherapeutic form of analysis: analysts are called for to sing more; it makes it easier when one stutters.

 

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.