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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