Madel
Among the things she hopes people will not do:
- Making fun of a person who stutters
- Laughing at the stutter
- Mimicking the stutter
- Making jokes about learning how to talk
- Giving knowing looks to other people as if the stutter is an inside joke
- Rolling eyes
- Sighing
- Looking pointedly at a watch or acting as if you want the person to hurry up.
To this list, we’d like to add the following.
Do Not:
- Say “take a breath” or “slow down” –People who stutter know how to breathe.
- Say “spit it out” – That’s what they are trying to do and that’s why they are having difficulty.
- Say “relax” – it’s not about tension.
- Finish sentences – it’s really frustrating to have someone finish your sentences.
- Treat the person as if they’re pretending or making a joke – a stutter is no joke.
- Treat them differently from people who speak fluently – they are just like everyone; their only issue is with speaking.
Remember, how you treat a person who stutters matters just as much as how you treat anyone else. Skip these mistakes!


