Maggie O’Farrell
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think I'd find it hard if I didn't.
I don't think I would want to give it to someone else.
It's such a, it's a story so close to my heart and so personal in a way because it's about my family or it's based on the lives of my family.
So I think I would find it hard to hand over.
Oh, so much.
So I started stammering as quite a young child.
And when I was little, it manifested as the kind of classic repeated syllable.
And for a while, I think as a child, I remember thinking, maybe no one else can hear this because...
My family didn't react.
But then, of course, it wasn't long until someone at school made fun of me and I thought, oh, OK, no, they can't hear it.
And by the time I was a teenager, somehow it had kind of morphed into this complete blockage.
So if someone asked me a question, I would almost I think I was so I didn't want that repeated syllable to happen.
So I just kind of locked my throat in.
And so I would go completely silent and not be able to speak at all.
And, you know, I think all stammerers have a collection of sounds that are problematic for them and them alone.
Yeah, there's usually a kind of problem letter or a pronunciation or a diphthong or a collection of letters that's problematic.
One of mine was M, which is very tricky.
Yeah, thanks for that.
So actually, what you learn to do at a very young age is you learn about the flexibility of language.
So if somebody around that time had asked me, what's your name?