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24 Apr 2016

Let the Stuttering Rip (Ep. 577)

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stuttering, StutterTalk
Darren Johnson

Darren Johnson joins Peter Reitzes to discuss letting his stuttering rip. Mr. John shares his experiences of stuttering openly, focussing on “shame busting,” the challenge of showing the world his open stuttering, the chore and physical effort of stuttering, his desire to engage and communicate more productively with the world, how being African American impacts his experience of stuttering and so much more.

Today on StutterTalk, Mr. Johnson shares, “The pressure that I feel to be fluent is mostly the result of me wanting to be like everybody else…Look, this is what it is. You stutter; you can either accept it or wallow in it…Fluency has just become something that I find is not necessary and I would rather just be happy with being myself and doing the things that I want to do despite my stuttering.”

This is StutterTalk’s fourth and final episode in a series featuring New York City members of the National Stuttering Association (NSA). On Sunday, May 15th, the NYC Chapters of the NSA will hold their first local stuttering conference. It will be a day to support, educate, and empower stutterers as they explore The Past, Present, and Future of Stuttering. Event details here. Mr. Johnson is asked to discuss this workshop which is expected to draw 50-60 people who stutter.

Darren Johnson is a 22 year old graduate student who is originally from Maryland and joins us today from Manhattan where he is pursuing a PhD in chemical biology at Weill Cornell Medical College.

By: stuttertalk NYC Stutters Tags: Darren Johnson, letter stuttering rip, NYC Stutters, Peter Reitzes, stammering, stutter, stuttering

17 Apr 2016

The Struggle Gives Power (Ep. 576)

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Spring Kwok

Spring Kwok joins Peter Reitzes to discuss the power of struggle, the balance between acceptance and wanting to change and how being a first generation Chinese American woman impacts her experience of stuttering.

This is StutterTalk’s third episode in a series featuring New York City members of the National Stuttering Association (NSA). On Sunday, May 15th, the NYC Chapters of the NSA will hold their first local stuttering conference. It will be a day to support, educate, and empower stutterers as they explore The Past, Present, and Future of Stuttering. Event details here. Ms. Kwok is asked to discuss this workshop which is expected to draw 50-60 people who stutter.

Regarding identify, Ms. Kwok shares today on StutterTalk:

“We each own multiple intersecting identities that not only define who we are but also how we experience the world. These identifies not only conceptualize who we are, but they are also dynamic in that they are always changing. They can either confirm power or be marked by discrimination. For me, the largest identifies I see myself as are being Chinese, being a woman and of course being a stutterer. Those three have definitely molded my experience…As a child we lack an objective understanding of the shame that we feel for being different. We feel it, but we don’t necessarily understand it. The idea of being different for me growing up was not only in how I looked, but also in how I talked…Each of these three strong identities in me do have very powerful cultural and social implications…They have made me who I am. With being Chinese of course there are a whole slew of stereotypes. Being female there are a lot of things I need to live up to. And of course, being a person who stutters there are stigmas I have to avoid…I think stereotypes of any group is extremely harmful and they generalize billions of people into one model minority. And I think it is really dehumanizing and I think that is slows down self discovery…That has been my experience…These stereotypes have kind of simplified me into a broad spectrum and it has bread a lot of ignorance, not only in the people around me, but also in how I see how I am.”

Spring Kwok, 21 years old, hails from Houston, Texas and joins StutterTalk today from Manhattan where she is a senior at New York University studying Economics.

Links:

  • “Tell the truth. Be proud of who you are. You are not alone.” (StutterTalk Ep. 368)
  • Kicking Stuttering’s Butt (StutterTalk Ep. 573)
  • StutterTalk Book
  • How Schools Criminalize African American Girls (Leonard Lopate Show)
By: stuttertalk NYC Stutters Tags: identify, intersectinality, NYC Stutters, Peter Reitzes, Spring Kwok, stammering, stutter, stuttering

10 Apr 2016

Authentic Stuttering: Stuttering Without Disabling Fear (Ep. 575)

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stuttering, StutterTalk
Christopher Schuyler

Christopher Schuyler joins Peter Reitzes to discuss the importance of being present, living authentically with stuttering, stuttering without disabling fear, the conflict between wanting to be okay with stuttering and also wanting to stutter easily, facing stuttering as an attorney and so much more.

This is StutterTalk’s second episode in a series featuring New York City members of the National Stuttering Association (NSA). On Sunday, May 15th, the NYC Chapters of the NSA will hold their first local stuttering conference. It will be a day to support, educate, and empower stutterers as they explore The Past, Present, and Future of Stuttering. Event details here. Mr. Schuyler is asked today to discuss this workshop which is expected to draw 50-60 people who stutter.

Christopher Schuyler hails from Easton, Pennsylvania. Mr. Schuyler is a 31 year old person who stutters, a corporate attorney working in NYC and a marathoner.

Links:

  • The Past, Present, and Future of Stuttering (Ep. 574)
  • Authenticity by Gina Davis
By: stuttertalk NYC Stutters Tags: Christopher Schuyler, NYC Stutters, Peter Reitzes, stammering, stutter, stuttering

3 Apr 2016

The Past, Present, and Future of Stuttering (Ep. 574)

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stuttering, StutterTalk
Emma Alpern

Stavros Ladeas and Emma Alpern join Peter Reitzes to discuss the upcoming Day of Workshops in NYC titled The Past, Present, and Future of Stuttering, Sunday May 15, 2016. 9:30AM-5pm in Manhattan. Event details here. This event is for adults and mature teens who stutter.

Alpern and Ladeas announce that professional journalist and StutterTalk contributor Barry Yeoman will be the keynote presenter at this one day workshop and that StutterTalk host Christopher Constantino will also be presenting on a disability rights topic.

stuttering, StutterTalk
Stavros Ladeas

In promoting this workshop, The NYC Chapters of the National Stuttering Association explain that they “firmly believe that stuttering is okay.” When asked today on StutterTalk what it means to be okay with stuttering, Ms. Alpern explained, “It means I don’t have to change the way I speak; I don’t have to obsess over my speech…and that is one of the things I think we want to talk about at the conference…look at all the ways it can be okay.” Mr. Ladeas explained that many people may participate in stuttering self help to offset the “impact of society on stuttering” and to “unlearn a lot of what they have learned.” When discussing the topic of a cure, Mr. Ladeas shared, “For me, the cure is allowing myself to stutter openly, and be present, and be more of an effective communicator.”

Emma Alpern is an editor and writer living in Brooklyn, New York. She has written about stuttering for The Atlantic, Broadly, and Did I Stutter. Emma has been a part of the stuttering community for about five years, and co-leads the Brooklyn chapter of the National Stuttering Association. She’s also recently been involved with events for FRIENDS and SAY (the Stuttering Association for the Young).

Stavros Ladeas is first-generation American from Greek parents, who currently lives in Queens. He works in tech, making mobile apps for an agency in the city. He is co-founder and co-leader of the Manhattan Chapter of the National Stuttering Association. He’s been involved in the stuttering community for about five years now, and is enjoying the expanding stuttering community there.

Links:

  • Learning to Love to Stutter
  • Stutter More, with Feeling
  • Would You Take a Pill to Cure Your Stutter?
  • Camp SAY
By: stuttertalk NYC Stutters, stuttering Tags: Emma Alpern, National Stuttering Association, NSA, NYC NSA, Peter Reitzes, stammering, Stavros Ladeas, stutter, stuttering

27 Mar 2016

Kicking Stuttering’s Butt (Ep. 573)

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stuttering, StutterTalk
Leah Graham

Leah Graham joins Peter Reitzes to discuss navigating her way through the real world as a person who stutters. Ms. Graham is asked about her current speech therapy focussing on avoidance reduction, choosing self help and speech therapy when graduating college (a “do or die” moment), how okay she needs to be with her own stuttering, her plan to manage stuttering while making phones calls to buy a house, a recent report of a person being stopped at the border for stuttering, issues related to race and being an African American woman who stutters and so much more.

Leah Graham is 22 years old from Mount Holly, North Carolina. Ms. Graham graduated from the University of Mount Olive in May 2015 and is navigating her way through the real world as a person who stutters.

Links:

  • FRIENDS One-Day Conferences
  • Woman Detained at Atlanta Airport Because of Stuttering (StutterTalk Ep. 566)
  • I Stutter Card published by the Stuttering Foundation
  • Mr. Tavis Smiley: Stuttering and Speaking Deliberately (StutterTalk Ep. 179)
  • Black-ish: Dr. Hell No
By: stuttertalk stuttering Tags: Leah Graham, Peter Reitzes, stammering, stutter, stuttering

20 Mar 2016

“It was just so nice to be me today” (Ep. 572)

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FRIENDS2016OrangeCountyNora O’Connor and Loryn McGill join Reuben Schuff at the FRIENDS one day workshop in Orange County, California to discuss coming together in a community where it is okay to stutter and where stuttering is accepted. People who stutter, parents, siblings, speech-language pathologists and students joined forces for this wonderful one day conference. One teenager from the day’s workshop was reported to say, “It was so nice just to be me today.” McGill, O’Connor and Schuff discuss how such events help reduce the isolation of stuttering and instill confidence.

Nora O’Connor, LCWS, earned her Master’s in Social Work from San Francisco State University.  She has been involved in the stuttering self-help community for 20 years.  Nora co-chaired the 2004 FREINDS national conference in San Francisco. In her private practice, she treats people with who stutter, focusing on the emotional response to the disorder. Nora is an adviser to StutterTalk and author of the chapter Substance Abuse and Stuttering in the book Stuttering: Inspiring Stories and Professional Wisdom, published by StutterTalk.

Loryn McGill, M.S. CCC-SLP, is a Speech-Language Pathologist who is faculty at Chapman University in Orange, California. She’s in private practice, in Costa Mesa, exclusively working with people who stutter. Loryn has been involved with research, examining the use of medical intervention in stuttering and is currently involved in international research examining intervention in young children who stutter. She is passionate about her work with FRIENDS.

Loryn and Nora work collaboratively to provide comprehensive treatment to people who stutter. They are presenting at CSHA conference on Self Advocacy: SLPs and Social Workers working together. Loryn and Nora are developing a Cognitive Behavioral Treatment and Mindfulness workbook for SLPs to use with people who stutter.

Reuben Schuff is an author and roving host for StutterTalk. By profession and passion he is an aerospace engineer, and also, a traveler, a juggler, a Toastmaster, and a person who stutters. He is a workshop presenter for the National Stuttering Association (NSA) annual conference and is the co-founder of the Raleigh Teens Who Stutter (TWST) chapter of the NSA. Reuben also facilitates and presents with FRIENDS (the National Organization for Young People who Stutter). Reuben is author of Fluency: My Untrustworthy Friend in the StutterTalk book: Stuttering: Inspiring Stories and Professional Wisdom. 

By: stuttertalk FRIENDS One Day Conferences, stuttering Tags: FRIENDS One Day Conferences, Loryn McGill, Nora O'Connor, Reuben Schuff, stammering, stutter, stuttering
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