While its healing, your tongue will swell and you will have a lisp. it isn't permanent though. Only while healing when your tongue is swollen. So don't get it if you'll have to go to work or school in the next few days.
You'll have a lisp whilst the tongue is healing, when the swollen has gone down you should be fine, however, some peoples lisps stay after getting their tongue pierced, my sister is. I'm going through this step at the moment i have a lisp and cant speak or anything
Yes! I got mine pierced yesterday for the second time and i have a slight lisp nothing major though, the first time i got my tongue pierced the lisp lasted about 3 days till the swelling went down and my mouth adjusted to having a bar in it..hope this helps :)
It depends: If you're trying to get rid of the lisp, then probably not because I doubt the piercing would help. If you're trying to hide the lisp, having a piercing may be an excuse. Most people won't care whether or not you have a lisp or a pierced tongue so do what you feel is true to yourself.
yes
If the lisp is a result of the piercing then Yes it will go away. If you have the lisp prior to the piercing then No it will not go away and might make it worse
There is no length requirement for getting your tongue pierced. Anyone can get their tongue pierced with the exception of people that have their own personal and/or medical reasons.
No, your tongue cannot split from getting it pierced. Splitting or bifurcating the tongue involves a surgical procedure to physically divide the tongue in half. Piercing simply places jewelry through the tongue.
Ahhh Yes you can.
Yes. Often times people have a bit of a lisp right after they get their tongue pierced. The more you talk, the faster you'll get used to it and it'll heal so don't let that stop you. It sounds something like a person with teeth retainer on!
Getting a tongue piercin will hurt a bit regardless of what you've had pierced before.
Like anyone else you'll be unable to speak intelligibly for a bit, lisping and slurring your words. When the swelling goes down you should be able to learn to speak around it so that you sound pretty well the same as you did before you got it, especially if it's not placed too far forward. A really big or irregular end on the top will make it hard to speak without a lisp.
What do you think? You're getting a hole stabbed through your tongue.