About the Author:

Charlie Hughes, Ph.D., CCC-SLP, BCS-F, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Clinical Therapeutic Programs at Eastern Kentucky University (EKU). He is a person who stutters and teaches a variety of courses at the undergraduate and graduate level in the Communication Sciences and Disorders program at EKU. He served as a past board member on the American Board of Fluency and Fluency Disorders from 2015-2018. In the past, he served as a former co-chapter leader for the National Stuttering Association’s Northwest Ohio adult chapter and was a former co-chapter leader and former chapter leader for the Lexington, Kentucky adult chapter of the National Stuttering Association.

The theme of this year’s conference, “One Size Does NOT Fit All”, truly resonates with me as it relates to my personal experience with stuttering and how coping with my stuttering has changed over time.  Although there are parts of myself which will always remain the same, I have evolved in my thinking and have taken “who I am” along with my evolution as it relates to my stuttering. Ways of managing my stuttering that “fit” me when I was younger, had to evolve and change when I got older. I had to leave behind ways of thinking and reacting to my stuttering that were no longer helpful. When I finally started to work toward “letting go” of unhelpful behaviors and thinking, it allowed me to embrace new ways of approaching my stuttering that were more kind, caring, and healthy to myself.  It is important to mention at the beginning here that I’m sharing my personal experiences as a person who stutters and I’m writing from this perspective. Everyone who stutters is going to be different and have their own unique experience. For me, this is my personal story of evolving, changing, returning, and changing again as it relates to living and coping with my stuttering. 

The word “evolution” makes me think about “preferences” and how my preferences have changed over time (in general and with how I approach my stuttering). It is interesting to note that the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association’s (2005) position statement on evidence-based practice (EBP) in communication disorders also includes “preferences” in the EBP process, as it relates to client preferences. For me, my “preferences” have changed over time with how I wanted to manage and live with stuttering. I wonder if it would be fair to say that maybe some of our general preferences as people, in some way or another, change over time?  However, some of our preferences may always stay the same. (E.g. one of my favorite foods will probably always be cornbread! Parts of my personality will always remain, etc.) As I reflect on my life with stuttering, some of the ways I coped with stuttering when I was younger, would not work for me now. In addition, separate from stuttering, some of my preferences when I was younger would not be what I prefer now. 

For a moment, I’m going to use examples from my general life (separate from stuttering) and apply those to how I have changed with managing and living with stuttering. When I was younger, I loved to run (and I still do). In middle school and high school, I ran cross country and track and could run for miles, and miles, and miles without a strong possibility of getting injured. Running endless miles (and not stretching before) worked for me and was a “good fit” at that time. How about we take drinking soda as an example. When I was younger, I could drink many cans of soda all day long. Let’s now fast forward to the present day in 2023. As an adult, I still enjoy running (with running much less miles now) but I have learned the importance of stretching (torn cartilage around my knee made me realize the need to take it slow, and the benefit of stretching before running!). I now drink much more sparkling water compared to soda. What was a “good fit” when I was younger, was not necessarily a good match for me as an adult. 

Now, I’m going to focus on my stuttering. How I live and cope with stuttering now, is not the exact same way that I did when I was younger. For example, when I first started going to speech therapy, I began learning about easier ways to talk to manage my stuttering. This was a great “fit” for me at that point in my life. I used easy-relaxed-approach smooth-movements (ERA-SM) (Gregory, 2003) and in my young teenage years, this is how I preferred to manage my stuttering and used this strategy frequently (and still do today sometimes). As I grew into my young adult years, my preference for how to manage and live with my stuttering changed due to how I began to think differently about my stuttering. I began to think differently because I had new experiences. I began meeting more people who stutter and felt part of a stuttering community. I didn’t feel so alone anymore. During this time, I began to see my stuttering differently, simply as a way of speaking. This was simply how I talked. Some of the approaches I used in young adulthood consisted of the following and can be connected and credited to Van Riper’s (1973) work: being open about stuttering and not hiding it anymore, telling other people that I stutter, and stuttering on purpose to help myself get more comfortable with stuttering. 

Another example from my life that could be applied to how I’ve evolved in living with stuttering is related to music. Playing, writing, and listening to music is a big part of my life. I began playing guitar in high school and still play now. When I was able to purchase an electric guitar and an amplifier, I had to try and find something that was a good fit for me. I went through all different kinds of guitars and amplifiers when shopping. Did it look the way I wanted? Did it sound the way I wanted? I found a guitar that matched my style, my preference, and who I was. We all have different kinds of preferences. Think about your own life. You may prefer certain types of music over others, clothing style, food, where you might want to vacation, your idea of a “good time”, and what helps you “relax”. We all are different. 

My journey of finding the right guitar is like how I went on a journey to find what was a good fit for me regarding how to live with stuttering. Today, I enjoy the ability to just communicate, whether stuttering is in my speech or not. Being open about my stuttering has been very healing for me. I can be open about stuttering in several ways such as telling other people I stutter and stuttering on purpose. Gregory’s (2003) writing on the idea of options and choices for how to approach stuttering on purpose (voluntary disfluency and/or stuttering) really influenced me about my own choices for how I approach my stuttering.  I thought about how I could just openly stutter through voluntary stuttering (on purpose), but also throw in some voluntary disfluencies or other types of hesitations on purpose (listeners didn’t even know if it was real or not!). I began to see many more options available for how to live and “be” with my stuttering. I love the freedom I experience when communicating. I have choices. I can stutter. I can choose how I want to stutter. I can just have words come out however they want on a particular day. I am not the same person I was when I was younger, though parts of me will always be present. I feel like I’ve lived multiple lives with my stuttering and in life. I’ve learned to walk with my stuttering. My stuttering is part of who I am as a person and I’ve learned how to get to know it, because in the end, by learning about my own stuttering, I’ve got to know myself better and what works best for me. 

References:

American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. (2005). Evidence-based practice in communication disorders [Position Statement]. Available from www.asha.org/policy   

Gregory, H. H. (2003). Stuttering Therapy: Rationale and Procedures. Boston, MA. Pearson Education, Inc.

Van Riper, C. (1973). The Treatment of Stuttering. Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Prentice-Hall, Inc.

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Comments

My Evolution of Living and Coping with Stuttering: Preferences That Have Changed Over Time – Charlie Hughes — 28 Comments

  1. Hi Charlie,

    Thanks for this excellent paper. I find it interesting that your focus is on only your personal experience and journey with stuttering, when you are a SLP and university professor who teaches about stuttering.

    Your discussion of the evolution of preferences is an important one to have with people who stutter. It’s important for those of us who stutter to acknowledge that what worked or what we wanted then may no longer fit now.

    Do you discuss the importance of examining the different life points one is at regarding what works and still fits and what may have changed, with your students in your CSD classes?

    Pam

    • Hi Pam,

      Thank you so much for taking the time to read my story. Evolution is so important! Related to academic and clinical training in stuttering, a common approach used by some instructors in stuttering will be the idea of having students reflect on their own experiences related to the course content and apply that to what they are learning. I incorporate some of those strategies in my own work as a course instructor in the area of stuttering. Thanks again for your response and question!

  2. Dr. Hughes, I greatly appreciate your thoughts on how our preferences, practices and ourselves as individuals evolve. Our experiences truly shape and change us. For my future self I want to keep in mind your point of what worked for us at one time may not work now, and vice versa. Also, it is acceptable to change things up when something is not working. I like that you used the word “journey” because I feel that we are all on a journey, trying to find our true selves.

    • Thank you so much for your comment and for taking the time to read my story! I feel like I am not the same person (in some ways) when I was younger. I really appreciate your comment when you wrote “it is acceptable to change things up” – this is so true! Choices and options are so important and recognizing there are other ways of approaching something. Thanks again!

  3. Charlie,
    I am so happy for you that you feel comfortable with the way you speak and reclaimed your voice. Much like your relationship with soda, guitar, and running has changed over time, I believe is it so cool that you’ve had the foresight to recognise that maybe your relationship with stuttering could shift as well. How has this experience shifted the way that you teach stuttering therapy to future SLP’s? Thanks for sharing!

    • Thank you for your comment! These changes in my life have taken a long time…I try and incorporate and teach about how choices are so important. I feel like now I may focus more on that general idea – everyone is different – we have lots of choices for how to live with stuttering. Thanks again for your comment and for taking the time to read my story! I really appreciate it.

  4. Charlie,
    Thank you for sharing your personal story. I had you as a phonetics professor at Baldwin Wallace University when I was completing my undergraduate degree in CDIS. At the time, I had never interacted or knew a PWS. Now, as a 2nd year graduate student, I am diving deeper into all aspects of stuttering and I am especially interested in learning more about the lived experiences of those who stutter. I really enjoyed learning about how your view of stuttering changed over time, and how you’ve learned to adapt your mindset based on your own experiences. I was wondering, could you explain what made you interested in pursuing a career in speech-language pathology, and how your experience as a certified speech-language pathologist has shaped your view on stuttering as a whole?

    • Thank you for reading my story! I was interested in pursuing a career in speech-language pathology due to my personal experience with living with stuttering. My personal experience with stuttering informs what I do in my career. I strive to recognize that we all are unique individuals, with unique experiences. Although people who stutter share similar experiences, we are all different people. It is so important to understand the stuttering involves so many different aspects of a person’s life. Thanks again for reading my story!

  5. Dr. Hughes,
    What a neat insight! Thank you for sharing. I am currently an SLP grad student and we are currently learning about the change that happens to our clients who stutter that could happen within our time with them on our caseload. However, it never occurred to me that change can also happen over the course of a lifetime. The way you explained it makes so much sense. I can pick out things that have changed about me (and some that haven’t) because of different experiences and increased knowledge has brought about.
    I also have a professor who stutters and it’s a privilege to learn from a person who stutters. Your students are very lucky.

    • Thank you so much for your comment and for your kind words! You make a great point! To your point, it made me think about that changes in our life can appear small in the moment, but over time they can add up to big changes! It may just take time.

  6. Hi Dr. Hughes. Thank you for sharing your perspective.

    It made me really wonder about how as SLPs we can really support clients through the process of evolution. As I read through the articles on ISAD, one thing that really sticks out to me is the power of community and learning from others on the same journey.

    I did have a question-
    As a middle or high school SLP, do you think a good activity for therapy to this end would be reading or watching an article like the ones on ISAD from PWS and then discussing with the client? Not in a teach-y way but to expose them to others who stutter on the same (or different) journey and the range of their experiences, and open a dialogue with them about how they might relate, agree, or disagree?

    • Thank you for your comment and for taking the time to ready my story. As you mentioned, simply being together with other people, within a community, can be such a powerful component to our journey as we evolve as people (in all different kinds of ways).

  7. Hello Dr. Hughes,

    You mentioned that people’s preferences can change and that there are different methods for coping with stuttering. Are you familiar with the Oases battery? It allows SLPs to gain an understanding of how the student/client feels about stuttering and themselves. Do your own experiences influence treatment?

    Sheehan (1970) often argued that stuttering is like an iceberg, with only small portions of the problem being visible. I seek to gain a better understanding and hope to help student’s voices be heard.

    • Thank you for your comment! I think all of our collective experiences (as people in general) influence our work and interactions with people. That is certainly the case with me in my life, however, I am always careful to not assume my experiences are someone else’s experiences. Everyone is unique. By becoming more aware of my experiences, and reflecting on my experiences, I can make sure to be careful to not just think other people think, feel, and experience things like me. I am always careful about this. Thanks for reading my story!

  8. Hi Dr. Hughes,

    Thank you for sharing your personal experience with finding the best fit for you. It was eye opening for me to read the connections you made to everyday activities such as running, and to the techniques you used with your stuttering. I haven’t viewed stuttering in that way before, but it makes sense. What we do and like when we are kids can be complete different to the things we do and like at present.

    • Thank you for your comment! Those are such great points you make. I still enjoy those things in my childhood, it’s just a little different now! I’m sure we all are similar to that experience, in some way. Thanks again!

  9. Charlie, this was a truly insightful read. Your honest and detailed account of living and coping with stuttering has been enlightening and inspiring. It’s fascinating to see how your preferences have evolved over time and how you’ve adapted to manage your stutter better. Your journey is a testament to resilience and adaptability, and I’m sure it will offer comfort and guidance to many others facing similar challenges. Keep sharing your experiences, and continue to be the beacon of hope for many. Your courage is commendable, and your evolution is nothing short of extraordinary. Thank you for sharing your story.

    • Thank you so much for your kind, encouraging, and thoughtful comment. I really appreciate you sharing this. Thank you!

  10. Dr. Hughes, Thank you for sharing your story. Your insight into changing strategies throughout your life time was inspiring. I enjoyed the comparisons as well. Having a personal experience with something that a client is currently working on is great for building rapport as well as treating the client. It sounds as if you are able to give this insight to clients and help them figure out what works best for them. I have two questions for you.
    1. What made you decide to pursue the career of Speech Language Pathology?
    2. What made you decide to be a professor as well?

    • Thank you for taking the time to ready my story. I decided to pursue a career in speech-language pathology due to my experience with living with stuttering. I wanted to pursue a career as a faculty member and teach about stuttering because I wanted to help others understand all the factors that contribute to stuttering. My hope is that by helping to teach people about stuttering, that they will be better able to support individuals who stutter in helpful ways in their future careers, taking into consideration all the different factors that contribute to the experience of stuttering.

  11. Dr. Hughes,

    I am a second-year graduate student, and I am currently taking a class on stuttering. It was interesting to read about your experience with stuttering and how the strategy that used to be the best fit for you was no longer the same strategy as your experiences changed. I also like how you described preferences in terms of the EBP process because I have thought about how this means something different for different clients, but I had not considered how this can also mean something different for the same client based on different periods of time.

    In your paper, you explained how you became more open about your stuttering based on your experiences, and that you started telling people you stutter, as well as stuttering voluntarily. I imagine this was a big change for you, and it probably felt very different from what you were used to when you first tried voluntary stuttering, rather than trying to avoid stuttering.

    Were you nervous to try something different after you felt like you had already found something before that was working for you, or did you find that this was a comfortable change for you to make based on the positive impact it had on your communication?

    I appreciate you sharing your experience!

    • I really appreciate your question and taking the time to read through my story.

      I was very nervous to try something new when I was younger! Doing some of the techniques when I was younger felt safe for me and it was hard to leave that “comfort zone”, and I knew I had to try something different. I still use some of the strategies I used when I was younger (they still help me!).

      I had the tendency to avoid communicating when I was younger, and I know I had to work on becoming more open about stuttering. Being open about my stuttering could look like so many different things and I enjoyed that freedom to choose how I wanted to be open about it.

  12. Thanks for sharing your journey, Charlie. I recognize so much. I knew as a child I wanted to play the saxophone. Preferably the tenor. But I was too young, so I learned some other instruments. But the tenor sax was my dream and I pursued it. I bought the cheapest one, and exchanged it throughout the years to one that’s beautiful both inside and out. At the same time I’ve had hobbies. A zillion. And still dive into one after the other, every time totally in love with that very hobby, but letting it go after a while. But my love for the tenor sax never faded one single second.

    Same story with therapy. I’ve tried so many therapies, went for it 100%, and let go, as it wasn’t me. Until I got a job as a teacher. And suddenly one of the therapy (Speaking Circles where we practiced a lot of voice and acting techniques through giving speeches) made complete sense. I still stutter, but now know how to use techniques and coping skills. It was like maths. You learn how to do it, but it doesn’t make sense until you know how you can use it. i think this is something SLPs should take into consideration, to make sure the client finds something that hits home for that very person. And the good thing of aging is that the older you get, the less you care. 😉 To realize that I own my stutter, but other people’s reaction to it is something they own, not me, gave me peace.

    Happy ISAD and thanks for sharing

    Anita

    • Anita,
      Thank you for sharing your experiences! I really appreciate you sharing your story and experiences from childhood and relating them to the present. What a great point about how to manage other people’s reactions as they relate to stuttering. Thank you for your comment!

  13. Dr. Hughes,

    This presentation has reinforced my belief in the power of individuality within the stuttering community. Each person’s journey is distinctive, and their preferences in managing their stuttering should be honored and respected. The concept of diversity in experiences, not only in living with stuttering but in life in general, is a powerful message.

    It’s encouraging to see stories like Charlie Hughes’ being shared, as they help reduce the stigma around stuttering and promote a more inclusive and understanding society. Ultimately, this presentation reminds us that our preferences and strategies are allowed to change and evolve, just as we as individuals grow and transform over time.

    I appreciate you sharing your experience!

    • Thank you so much for your comment here! I really appreciate your insights – and I really appreciate how you described the importance of recognizing that we all are different and how we all are changing in some way as we evolve as people. Thank you!

  14. Hi Dr. Hughes! Thank you for sharing your experience and evolution of living and coping with stuttering. It is inspiring to read how learning more about yourself and your own stuttering allowed for you to understand works best for you.

    I am a graduate student in speech-language pathology and am currently taking a stuttering course. It was interesting to learn more about your connection to Van Riper’s (1973) work and how that connected to your strategies in young adulthood. Therefore, in your adulthood, how did disclosing your stutter look in a social and professional setting? In addition, when revealing your stutter, how did that impact your sense of self and your own personality?

    • Thank you for your question and for taking the time to read my personal experience with stuttering. Van Riper’s (1973) work really had an influence on me related to my personal experience with stuttering. In regard to your question about what it would look like to disclose my stuttering to others, I will provide an example. For me, when I would introduce myself, I would sometimes produce some stuttering on purpose when saying my first name. I then would sometimes make a causal, matter of fact comment that I’m a person who stutters, or that I stutter. When I would disclose my stuttering, for me, I felt a lot of freedom to share my stuttering and by sharing my stuttering, I was sharing with someone else a part of who I was as a person. Thank you so much for your questions and for taking the time to ready my story!