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The life of a boy without vocabulary

As a baby, Griff Eldridge was quieter than most. But he slept well. He ate. He played with his big brother Ira. And he smiled easily. For a long time,…

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KCRW placeholderBy Here Be Monsters • Apr 12, 2017 • 1 min read

As a baby, Griff Eldridge was quieter than most. But he slept well. He ate. He played with his big brother Ira. And he smiled easily. For a long time, his parents Luke and Davinia didn’t worry, because he was so happy and healthy.

When Griff became a toddler, Luke and Davinia started to compare his speech to the speech of other children and to the standards laid out in the Personal Child Health Record, a book issued to new parents by the UK government.

Griff was on track when he started to babble around 12 months old. But, unlike other children, the babble never evolved to understandable sentences.

Luke and Davinia began to track Griff’s speech in a notebook and test his hearing. They took him to several doctors, none of whom agreed on a single diagnosis. They learned of “Verbal Dyspraxia” and “Phonological Disorder.” He’d see a speech therapist.

Griff is nearly four years old, about to start primary school, and still he’s never spoken a fully coherent sentence. They have 18 months to get him up to speed. Recently, Davinia’s been teaching Griff the signing language Makaton (see below).

In this episode, producer Luke Eldridge (Griff’s father) shares scenes from their home as his family works together to help Griff learn to talk.

Bethany Denton edited this episode, along with help from Jeff Emtman. Additional editing help from Nick White at KCRW.

Hello NYC! Jeff and Bethany are speaking at The Unplugged Soul at Columbia University’s Heyman Center on April 14th and 15th. It’s free. Register here.

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    Here Be Monsters

    Staff Writer

    Arts & Culture StoriesArts