Mount Pearl council recognized International Stuttering Awareness Day earlier this fall. From left are councillors Chelsea Lane, Isabelle Fry, Jim Locke, Mayor Dave Aker, Newfoundland and Labrador Stuttering Association co-founder Greg O’Grady, Deputy Mayor Nicole Kieley, and councillors Mark Rice and Bill Antle, all wearing nametags in recognition of stuttering awareness. Saying one’s name, said O’Grady, can be extremely difficult for people who stutter. Mark Squibb photo
By Mark Squibb
The City of Mount Pearl recognized October 22 as International Stuttering Awareness Day with Greg O’Grady of the Newfoundland and Labrador Stuttering Association of (NLSA) joining council for the proclamation, conspicuously sporting a nametag around his neck.
“One of the greatest fears that a person who stutters has is being asked what one’s name is,” said O’Grady. “That’s the biggest fear we all have.”
Grady said a person who stutters may feel like a deer frozen in headlights when asked, ‘What is your name?’
“For most people, being asked your name is taken for granted, yet for the global community of people who stutter this question is a traumatic question.” said Grady.
Councillor Chelsea Lane said she has taught a number of children who stutter.
“One thing that a student said to me that really resonated is, ‘Miss, I stutter, and people think they’re helping me by trying to finish my sentences before I get the chance, but I really just want them to listen so that I can speak,’” said Lane. “And that really stuck with me, because people may not realize that when people are stuttering, you’re not helping them by trying to fill in the blanks. Sit back, and listen, and give them the chance to say what they need to say. I think that’s really important.”
Since 2018, the association has been hosting a ‘walk, run, or roll’ event to raise funds to help subsidize therapy, equipment, and other costs for people who stutter, and has awarded over $22,000 worth of bursaries. Grady said the association has only touched the tip of the iceberg.
With the support of donors, the NLSA will be awarding six $1,000 bursaries this year. The bursaries are available for preschool, school age children, adolescents, adults and seniors who stutter or face other communication challenges. Applications are to be submitted by midnight on Friday, November 28. Applications can be emailed to info@nlstuttering.ca and or dropped off at the association’s office at 44 Torbay Road, Suite 100, in St. John's.
An estimated 350,000 Canadians stutter.