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Effective Strategies to Help People Who Stutter

Using Voluntary Stuttering to Make a Difference

6 min readNov 8, 2023

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Photo by Eliott Reyna on Unsplash

“I bet you can’t stutter better than me!”

It’s hard to imagine what it would be like to have your communication skills halted. I don’t want to, but I can imagine a physical injury that prevented me from moving the way that I do, but imagining the fluent flow of words out of my mouth is really hard to do.

When you study to become a speech and language therapist, you are asked to go into a situation and stutter purposefully. The point being that you can have a sliver of the experience that a person who stutters would have on a regular basis. My experience was to try and stutter while making a purchase in the cafeteria of the college where I studied.

Photo by Tonik on Unsplash

The anxiety of the situation is still palpable to me.

What will I say? What will happen when I stutter?

Of course, there were some inverse thoughts too- what will happen if I don’t stutter “right?” I might seem inauthentic- imagine if the cashier thinks I am trying to make fun of people who stutter- that would be terrible!

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Dan Fitch
Dan Fitch

Written by Dan Fitch

Helping kids communicate is my day job. Wading through my thoughts to get them out here.

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