My Stutter, Myself

If others don’t notice my stutter, can I really call myself a stutterer?

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If others don’t notice my stutter, can I really call myself a stutterer?

I was walking to my home in Toronto when a well-dressed man politely stopped me to ask for directions.

“Could you tell me which way to Bloor and…” He struggled to get the next word out, a pained look on his face, but I knew better than to finish his sentence for him.

“… Bathurst?” he said after several seconds of straining. When I started to answer, he told me that he didn’t actually need to know. He was practising stuttering openly, he explained, hoping to become more confident doing so around strangers.

I lit up with excitement. “Are you doing that because it’s National Stuttering Awareness Day?” I asked, always eager to connect with other people who stutter. When the man asked how I knew that, I said that I grew up with a stutter.

He nodded, looking a bit wistful: “And I suppose your stutter has magically disappeared since then?”

His question gave me pause. I understood why he assumed this—when compared to his fairly severe stutter, I sounded fluent, stutter-free. But even as we spoke, my stutter had influenced my speech: For example, I’d misnamed International Stuttering Awareness Day as National Stuttering Awareness Day to avoid the tricky front vowel sound at the beginning of the word—a sound I continue to struggle with.

And while it’s true that my stutter was more noticeable when I was a child, this was partially because I’d since found workarounds for difficult words and sounds, helping me hide the worst of it. When I answered his question, I opted for the simplest explanation: that I had grown out of my stutter. But was this true?

According to data from the Canadian Stuttering Association, four per cent of Canadian children stutter and only one per cent of people stutter into adulthood—a 75 per cent drop. But are the supposed ex-stutterers completely free of their past disfluencies? Or ...

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