How My Stutter Started - A Bit About
Me
I was born in
Birmingham, England on September 13th 1973. I was the third
child of Angela and Robin, my brother Gavin was six and my
sister Sharon was four. My parents, brother and sister are
fluent, so it was a shock to everyone when I started to stutter
at the age of four.
After I was born my
mother decided to leave work to look after me and up until the
age of four there were no faults in my
speech.
At the age of four
she felt it was time for her to return to work and a friend of
the family offered to pick me up from school, take me to her
house, look after me, and even feed me until my mother was
ready to pick me up at around 6.30pm. Her name was Jean and she
had a son who was in my class at school called
Graham.
Being looked after
by Jean was not something that worried me, I liked her and
Graham and was actually quite looking forward to going to their
house. So Jean picked us up from school and we walked back to
her house where me and Graham played football in the back
garden. At around 5pm the evening meal was ready and Jean
called us into the house, this is where things started to go
horribly wrong.
In my family at meal
times we would collect our plate from the table and were
allowed to take it to whichever room we wanted to or even into
the garden to eat the food, very laid back and this is
what I was used to.
However in Jean's
house they ate in a dining room around a dining table, this of
course should not be a problem but it turned out to be the
start of my stutter.
Graham led me into
the dining room where I saw a very well presented dining table
with two knives, two forks, two spoons (why do you need two?, I
wondered ). There were serviettes, table mats, even flowers,
there were people sitting around the table who I had never met
before, Graham's father, older brother and older sister and it
seemed like they were all staring at me.
I sat down at the
table feeling rather uncomfortable and then various people
started to ask me different questions about myself, what's your
name?, which football team do you support?, what's your
favourite subject at school? etc. I felt under great pressure
and found it very difficult to get the words out. I was aware I
had not spoken properly but was unsure as to
why.
How people react
especially adults when a person first stutter's is very
important. If they over-react or panic this can have an adverse
effect on that person. I distinctly remember Graham's older
sister laughing which made me feel very embarrassed. Jean rose
from the table and picked up the telephone which was in the
same room and started dialing a number.
Why is she making a
phone call during the meal? Why doesn't she wait until after
the meal? I thought to myself. Then I heard her asking for Mrs
Hill, my mother of course. Why is she phoning my mother? Now
the last thing my mother wanted on her first day at work was a
call from Jean saying there was a problem with me. "You didn't
tell me Stephen had a stutter" said Jean.
"He hasn't" said my
mother in a shocked voice. This of course had been the first
time I had stuttered.
"Well he's been
stuttering quite badly here today" said Jean, a slight
over-reaction as I had only stuttered around the dining table,
not in the garden etc.
My mother was
obviously concerned and shocked but so was I. I had heard this
conversation and although did not know what a stutter was, I
was aware they were talking about my speech, not about how good
it was but about how bad it was. This obviously made me feel
paranoid and self-conscious.
Eventually my mother
turned up to take me home but before leaving had a discussion
with Jean in front of me about what had happened in the dining
room. This of course made me even more aware of my
failings.
When we arrived home
my parents sat me down and started to ask me questions about my
day, this was not a normal event, they were listening to my
speech. I was now feeling comfortable and did not stutter, I
imagine this would have left them feeling confused. For the
rest of that evening I spoke fluently and eventually went to
bed.
When in bed I always
think about the day I have just had and also think about what
might happen tomorrow. I thought that was a strange day, I was
looking forward to going to Jean's house and was originally
enjoying myself playing football in the garden but then in the
dining room I struggled to speak. I tried to analyze why that
might have been and came up with the following three
conclusions:
1. I may have
struggled as I did not feel comfortable.
2. I may have
struggled because I felt under pressure.
3. I may have
struggled as I was having to speak and socialise with people I
did not know.
All of the above
were new situations for me, as a four year old boy everything
was made very easy for me, I rarely came into contact with new
people, rarely felt under pressure or uncomfortable and if I
did normally had my parents close at hand to help and comfort
me.
I then thought about
what might happen on the next day, I have to go to school, no
problem, then I have to go to Jean's house, oh no I thought,
and then started to imagine myself in the dining room and could
see myself stuttering when talking. What I am doing is
pre-predicting failure which normally means failure. This a
common trait of many stutterers. I then started to worry and
found it hard to sleep.
At school the next
day I was totally fluent but as predicted
stuttered quite badly in the dining room. Jean didn't
phone my mother this time but before leaving to go home they
again discussed my speech in front of me.
What I was hoping
for but didn't ask for was that somebody else could look after
me but unfortunately I had to be looked after by Jean for
around a year. My speech confidence became shattered and
the stutter started to rear its ugly head in other areas, i.e.
at school, and home etc.
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