He beat his stutter with a tech invention. Then he found the voice to help others
AT age 29, Shmuel Horowitz had long since come to terms with the persistent stutter that had accompanied him since childhood. By then, the most daunting phases of life for someone with a speech impediment — cheder, yeshivah, the nerve-racking parshah of shidduchim — were already behind him. He had built a life, started a family. Everyone had their own struggles, he thought, and a severe speech impediment was his particular burden to carry through life.
That thought gave Horowitz, a Gerrer chassid from Bnei Brak, a certain peace of mind. “I had tried every technique out there to overcome it,” he says “There really wasn’t much more I could do.”
Or so he thought.
Because after almost three decades of stuttering — after a youth of near-silence, and the long, hard climb to succeed despite his impediment — Shmuel Horowitz revolutionized his life. Not only did he finally overcome his stutter, he opened up undreamed-of horizons in healthcare that have helped many others on both sides of the Atlantic.
“My stutter used to be very, very severe,” says Horowitz, whose current speech is nearly flawless, save for a few faint remnants — pauses, expressions, hesitations that hint at a deeper history. “You really can’t imagine what it used to be like for me to talk. There were moments when I just froze. Eventually I developed tics — something pretty common in people with speech difficulties — just from the anxiety.”
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