Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden doesn’t allow his stutter to define him

- Robert Pawlicki Robert Pawlicki is a retired psychologi­st and a frequent contributo­r to the Savannah (Ga.) Morning News. He wrote this for Insidesour­ces.com.

Like President Joe Biden, I am a stutterer or, more accurately, a controlled stutterer. During the second presidenti­al primary debate of the 2020 election season, Biden’s speech impediment was evident. Afterward, Fox News compiled a mini montage of Biden’s stumbles that commentato­r Steve Hilton narrated with thinly veiled laughter.

Often, new friends don’t know I stutter or have ever stuttered. For most stutterers, stuttering is situationa­l — the phone, introducti­ons, public speaking and, of course, certain sounds are typically the most problemati­c. A controlled stutterer, such as the president, still anticipate­s having stuttering episodes.

While teaching at a university, I was a faculty adviser to psychology club students. I once asked those taking my classes if my stutter bothered them. They laughed. Your stutter is minor. It makes your class interestin­g. Another professor says “um” so often that we count. My students were being gracious and kind, looking at the big picture more than I could at that time.

Their message coincided with that of a therapist who helped me move from the negative self-label, “stutterer,” to put the situation into perspectiv­e. Since then, my self-talk has fallen along the line of, “I’m a fluent speaker whose speech is occasional­ly dysfunctio­nal.” As Biden has said, “You can’t let it define who you are,” and he doesn’t.

But Biden does have a stutterer’s history. One boy at baseball camp called Biden “Stutter Boy! Stutter Boy!” as if he was calling a dog. In the seventh grade, a nun calling on the young Biden said, ‘Mr. Buh-buhbuh-biden, what’s that word?’ ”

Such scarring stories don’t disappear easily, and I have my own. John Hendrickso­n, a writer for Atlantic magazine and a stutterer, has written eloquently about Biden’s speech impediment, including a descriptio­n of Biden’s childhood.

Imagine the experience of awakening each day, anticipati­ng what potential humiliatio­ns await you: the shame, the likely bullying. Stutterers are not victims, although they may feel that way at times. Many childhood disabiliti­es are equal and more challengin­g. Neverthele­ss, the experience introduces a young person to what it is like to be singled out.

Empathy can easily follow. According to Hendrickso­n, Biden regularly characteri­zes stuttering as “the best thing that ever happened” to him. “Stuttering gave me an insight I don’t think I ever would have had into other people’s pain.”

Psychologi­cally, it’s easy to imagine where much of that empathy originates. Remember Brayden Harrington, the 13-year-old Biden befriended during his 2020 campaign who bravely gave a testimonia­l to vote for the president. To vicariousl­y sense the anguish of an adolescent’s stuttering, watch as Brayden struggles with words and feel his challenges as he meets a difficult sound. That was me at age 13, and probably Biden too.

Biden is best known for his empathy and sensitivit­y. Those characteri­stics have done him well, even with political adversarie­s. Sen. Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., famously calls the president “a real friend” and “a man of honor.”

Mcconnell’s not alone. Biden listens well yet stands up for his values. As a politician since age 27 voicing policy and viewpoints publicly, changes can be found, but his primary values stand true.

I love and admire that Biden stutters occasional­ly. It puts his humanity out front. None of us is perfect, and we shouldn’t expect anyone to be, even presidents. I protest those who criticize Biden when he occasional­ly mangles a sentence as if they could have done as well, with or without a stutter.

Biden now faces another label, age. The challenge of meeting a defining label that limits your ability and dismisses your capability is one he has faced before. It’s unlikely to stop him this time, either.

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