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DARE TO ASK: Please allow a stutterer to finish

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

How do others feel about someone who stutters badly and is trying to make a statement or ask a question while taking up your time? Should you interrupt and answer?

Shana B., Miami

Replies

As a stutterer as a child, you should give the stutterer respect enough to finish what he or she is trying to say. If you interrupt them, you may get hit, smacked or kicked.

Bedo, 48, male, Straw Plains, Tenn.

It doesn’t bother me when people finish my thoughts if they are nice about it. I do get offended by the “you are wasting my time, you buffoon” attitude I sometimes receive. If you approach it the same way you would a person who was “looking for the right word,” you should come across all right.

Kæreste, 22, female, Jacksonville

I simply look at them gently while thinking out a shopping list, and wait till they finish — they haven’t the foggiest that you were thinking about what to make for dinner, or how great your husband was in bed last night. Plus, they greatly appreciate your patience.

N.D., 40, female, Michigan

If you can’t spare an extra 30 seconds to spare someone’s feelings, then don’t interact with anyone who is different from you.

Kate, Newport, R.I.

I prefer it if people finish a sentence for me if I can’t. For whatever reason, if I get caught on a word, I can immediately say it right if someone else says it first.

Kris, 24, male, Williamsburg, Va.

Expert says

James Earl Jones. Julia Roberts. Maya Angelou. U.S. Sen. Joe Biden. Ron Harper. John Updike. Bo Jackson. Carly Simon. Andrew Lloyd Webber. Greg Louganis. John Stossel.

We talked with none of them. However, they all at one time or another had stuttering problems, which they mostly overcame to accomplish amazing things. (Go ahead, try to imagine being an Olympic diver and a stutterer at the same time. See? Impossible.)

What would seem a no-brainer — we hear it’s rude to interrupt anyone — may not always be, says Kenneth O. St. Louis, co-founder of the International Fluency Association and a top researcher on stuttering.

“There are a few instances where stutterers like it when someone fills in their words, especially in severe cases where they have given up on their own ability,” he said. “Usually, though, after some speech therapy and guidance on self-esteem, most don’t want someone filling in their words.”

In fact, a survey of public attitudes on stuttering that St. Louis shepherded found that most people understand they should essentially ignore the speech impediment and wait for the person to finish.

“Filling in words is often taken by a person as they can’t do it themselves — assuming you even can fill in their words. There are lots of instances where someone fills in something a person has no intention of saying. I remember a person who was trying to say ‘I,’ and the other person kept pointing to his eye. So it often just doesn’t help.”

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