December 11, 2006
Stutterers Silent No More
Sargent therapy program helps troubled speakers free their voices
By Chris Berdik
 |
People
who stutter know that the real impact of stuttering is not stammering
or stumbling over words; the real impact of stuttering is silence.
Photo © Randy Faris/CORBIS |
This
spring, Boris Iyutin will earn a Ph.D. in physics from MIT and enter
the job market, but not as a physicist. Instead he will be looking for
work in finance. Why? Because Iyutin stutters, and physics terms can’t
often be replaced by synonyms that are easier to say, his usual means
of sidestepping his speech impediment.
“A proton is a proton,”
says 31-year-old Iyutin, who spent seven years thousands of miles from
his native Russia to earn his doctorate, including four years studying
proton beam collisions at the Fermilab in Illinois.
But for
the last few months, with help from a weekly meeting at Sargent College
of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Iyutin has been working to
reduce his stuttering. Every Tuesday evening, he joins about 20 others
who stutter for a workshop presided over by two Sargent faculty,
Adriana DiGrande, a lecturer in speech, language, and hearing sciences,
and Diane Parris, a clinical associate professor. A handful of graduate
students also help facilitate. Some who attend the group have trouble
with vowels, some with consonants, and some encounter more random
“speech blocks,” when their voices simply stop working. They meet to
discuss their progress toward more fluent speech and to work on
personal goals. Mostly, they come for support from others who know that
the real impact of stuttering is not stammering or stumbling over
words; the real impact of stuttering is silence.
“People who
stutter spend a lot of energy trying to hide their stuttering,” says
DiGrande. They refrain from making phone calls or speaking up at work
or in social settings, practices known collectively as “avoidance
behaviors.” For example, one Tuesday evening attendee, 26-year-old Ravi
Patel, remembers that in school, “I never raised my hand in class, even
if I wanted to ask a question or knew the answer.”
About 3.3 percent of children stutter,
according to the National Stuttering Association, and for most of them,
the trouble starts with their first attempts at speech. Because most
kids who stutter grow out of it, many parents don’t seek treatment for
them, in the hope that the impediment will go away on its own. As a
result, avoidance behaviors can become entrenched in the one percent of
adults who continue to stutter.
Those who have been stuttering
for a long time must learn to take risks, says DiGrande. She and Parris
encourage group members to confront the silences and the fear and shame
that lead to them. At a recent meeting, for instance, participants are
asked to make impromptu speeches and then field questions from their
audience.
Most of them have already had other speech therapy.
Many have been through the New England Fluency Program run by DiGrande,
where participants are asked to make scores of phone calls, analyze
videotapes of themselves speaking, and do daily work on “fluency
shaping” strategies, such as coordinating breath with speech, relaxing
speech muscles, and maintaining “light contact” at the lips and tongue.
For this meeting, one by one they pick from a hat a quotation
to be the theme of their talk. Then each speaker announces what fluency
technique he or she will practice during the impromptu speech. “I’m
going to stretch my first sounds,” reports one speaker. “My goals are
to speak at a lower rate and to monitor my breathing as I speak,” says
another.
While stuttering sometimes runs in families, there is
no single cause, says DiGrande. “It could be neurological, it could be
chemical, it could be genetic,” she says. But the psychological
component cannot be ignored. That sentiment, expressed in a quote by
the late speech-language pathologist Charles Van Riper, inspires one of
the evening’s final impromptu speeches: “Stuttering is everything you
do trying not to stutter.”
That “everything” includes
seeking refuge in silence. For Iyutin, the challenge of speaking has
pulled him away from the science he’s pursued for much of his adult
life. On the other hand, it has also pushed him into activities where
vocal fluency isn’t so important. Specifically, Iyutin started
competing in ballroom dancing — samba, rumba, mambo, and other Latin
dances — when he came to the United States. It was an easy way to meet
people, since, as he says, “When I dance, I don’t have to talk.”
Near
the close of the meeting, one of the talks is about motivation, and the
participants share their reasons for joining the Tuesday session. A law
professor about to return to the classroom from a sabbatical says he
wanted to “prepare and get into habits that will allow me to avoid
speech blocks” during lectures. Another participant notes, “I see
coming here as doing something positive for ourselves, being proactive
rather than sitting back, afraid of our next stutter.”
Chris Berdik can be reached at cberdik@bu.edu.
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