stammering stutterng
 

Socialising With A Stutter

My social life started to take off at the age of sixteen, I went out more in the evenings and on the weekend went to pubs and clubs with my friends. This though created a new speech trauma, attempting to order food and drinks.

Vodka, bitter, diet coke to name but a few, I found especially hard to say. At the end of the evening we would sometimes go for a curry, I would order scampi and chips as I found it hard to order curry or balti etc.

My friends were all meeting girls but for me it seemed impossible. I had a lack of confidence and my negative mind said to me "why would a girl want to date someone with a stutter?".

People would say to me "you need to think more positively", however at that stage of my life, I had nothing to be positive about.

On one Thursday evening, aged 16, I had a telephone call from my best friend. He told me that it was his birthday on the Saturday and that he was organising an all day drinking session, and invited me.

I thought it's hard enough going out from seven until eleven, let alone all day, however told him I would go, it was my best friend after all.

This was the first time I had drank alcohol in the daytime and quite quickly became fairly drunk. At around eight o'clock I was talking to everybody in the pub even people who I didn't know.

At one point after ordering a drink I realised that I was speaking fluently without a care in the world or a stutter. This had been the first time I had been drunk and the first time since the age of four I had been fluent! I thought to myself, all of the alcohol I have consumed must have killed my stutter. It had probably been one of the best evenings out I had had, I even met a girl and she gave me her phone number.

The next morning I awoke feeling very ill, lethargic and tired and to my disappointment spoke terribly all day. I also didn't have the courage to phone the girl I had met.

I started to analyze why I had been fluent when I had been drunk, the answer was that the drink had given me a confidence and a care-free attitude that I didn't have when I was sober. It proved to me that the stutter was a psychological problem, if I can speak when I am drunk, I should be able to speak when I am sober. This gave me encouragement that one day when I have more maturity and time, that I will be able to overcome my stutter.

At age 18 my life seemed to improve, I dated my first girlfriend. I will never forget the first night we went out, I was very nervous and felt I was certain to stutter during the evening.

I had met her when I had been drunk and was worried about how she would react when I stuttered. We went to a bar and when we arrived I handed her a five pound note and said "I'm just going to the toilet, I'll have a pint of lager and also order yourself whatever you want, please".

Of course I didn't need the toilet, but she seemed none the wiser.

I came out of the toilet and was relieved to see she had ordered the drinks and had found a table. I had decided I would come clean and tell her about my stutter, which I did, to my surprise she asked me various questions about stuttering and didn't have a problem with it.

She even told me about a personal problem she had and seemed to like the fact I had been truthful. This relationship lasted for sixteen months.

Aged 22, I met a new girlfriend and at this point decided it was about time I ordered my own food and drink etc, and with her help, we started to think of ways to try and overcome the stutter.

 

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Interesting Stuttering Facts 

Think your alone? Well you're most certainly not. History is full of well known men and women who have struggled with this affliction and in many cases overcome it.

Aristotle
Robert Boyle
Lewis Carrol
King Charles I
Charles Darwin
Demosthenes
Scatman John
King Louis II
Moses
Marylin Monroe
Emperor Napoleon the First
Isaac Newton
Theodore Roosevelt
Virgil


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FACT

1% of the adult population has a stutter with men accounting for about 80% of all adult stutterers.

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FACT

People with a Stutter often find it difficult saying their own name. This is of course embarrassing for the individual and some people have even had their name changed to one they can easily say. Ironically Once the name has been legally changed, the person will often find that they can now say the old name easily but has trouble with the new one.

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