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News We Love: Teenager overcomes speech disorder, performs in packed auditorium

News We Love: Teenager overcomes speech disorder, performs in packed auditorium
FOR OTHER RUNNER UPS. RECEIVED $2,500 EACH. NOW TO SOME NEWS WE LOVE FOR YOU TONIGHT. A LOCAL HIGH SCHOOLER IS INSPIRING OTHERS AFTER OVERCOMING MAJOR SPEECH CHALLENGES THROUGH THE POWER OF MUSIC. WLWT NEWS FIVE’S RACHEL WHELAN SHOWS US HOW ONE TEENAGER FOUND HIS VOICE THROUGH SONG. HI THERE. RACHEL. HI. HI, MIKE AND SHEREE. HUNTER SWAFFORD STRUGGLED TO SPEAK FOR YEARS AFTER HE WAS DIAGNOSED WITH A SPEECH DISORDER. HE WAS TOLD BY DOCTORS THAT HE MIGHT NOT BE ABLE TO TALK FULLY UNTIL HE WAS 18, BUT THIS WEEK HE TOOK THE STAGE HERE AT MADEIRA HIGH SCHOOL AND PERFORMED A SOLO IN FRONT OF A CROWD, OH MY DEAR, GEAR, FOOTBALL AND THEATER AND BOWLING. AT FIRST GLANCE, HUNTER SWAFFORD LOOKS JUST LIKE ANY OTHER 14 YEAR OLD. GOT ALL OF THIS BELTS I COLLECTED. BUT BEHIND THE WWE BELTS, BENGALS GEAR AND VIDEO GAMES IS A JOURNEY YEARS IN THE MAKING. THEY TOLD HIM, TOLD ME ACTUALLY THAT IT WOULD PROBABLY ABOUT 18 IF HE DOES TALK. THERE WAS NEVER A GUARANTEE. HUNTER WAS DIAGNOSED WITH APRAXIA AT JUST FOUR YEARS OLD, A SPEECH DISORDER THAT MAKES IT DIFFICULT FOR THE BRAIN AND MOUTH TO WORK TOGETHER. BUT AFTER YEARS OF THERAPY, HARD WORK, AND DETERMINATION, HUNTER FOUND SOMETHING THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING. DO THE WORDS COME EASIER TO YOU? YES. BUT IT’S ALL GONNA BE ALL RIGHT. SINGING IN YOUR LIVING ROOM IS ONE THING. BUT THIS WEEK, THE MADEIRA HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMAN TOOK A HUGE STEP FORWARD, PERFORMING A SOLO IN FRONT OF A PACKED AUDITORIUM DURING HIS HIGH SCHOOL CHOIR CONCERT. I WAS NERVOUS A LOT. I WAS SHAKING, THINKING I WOULD MESS UP. AND YET, WHEN THE MUSIC STARTED, I BARELY GETTING BY. HUNTER FOUND THE WORDS CUL DE. I’M LOSING SLEEP AT NIGHT. SEEING HIM GO OUT THERE AND JUST PERFORM LIKE THAT. IT JUST SHOWS ALL THE EFFORT THAT HE’S PUT INTO THIS. EVERYBODY WAS LIKE, WOW, HUNTER, YOU DID WELL OUT THERE. BECAUSE FOR HUNTER, SINGING WAS NEVER JUST ABOUT THE MUSIC. IT WAS ABOUT FINALLY BEING HEARD. DON’T GIVE UP ABOUT YOUR DREAMS. DO NOT GIVE UP. HUNTER TOLD ME HE WANTED TO SHARE HIS STORY. SO IF OTHER KIDS WATCHING ARE FEELING A LITTLE DIFFERENT OR HAVING TROUBLE OVERCOMING SOMETHING THAT THEY FEEL INSPIRED. AS FOR THE SINGING, HE PLANS TO KEEP ON DOING IT AS LONG AS IT BRINGS THEM JOY. REPORTING IN MADEIRA RACHEL WHELAN WLWT NEWS FIVE. RACHEL. THANK YOU. I KNOW YOU HAD SOME INTERACTION WITH THE PARENTS, AND WHEN YOU SEE THEIR REACTION TO ALL OF THIS KIND OF BRINGS A TEAR TO YOUR EYE. AND TO THINK THAT HE MAYBE, YOU KNOW, THEY DIDN’T EXPE
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Updated: 7:35 PM EDT May 10, 2026
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News We Love: Teenager overcomes speech disorder, performs in packed auditorium
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Updated: 7:35 PM EDT May 10, 2026
Editorial Standards
Freshman high school student Hunter Swafford loves the Cincinnati Bengals, WWE, video games and country music.Like many 14-year-olds, his bedroom is packed with sports memorabilia, Funko Pops and posters of his favorite athletes and entertainers.But behind the collections and teenage hobbies is a journey years in the making.“When he sings, his voice comes out,” Hunter’s father, Tim Swafford, said.Hunter was diagnosed with apraxia when he was 4 years old — a speech disorder that makes it difficult for the brain and mouth to work together to form words.His father said doctors initially warned the family that Hunter may not fully speak until he was 18 years old.“They told me, actually, that it would probably be about 18 if he does talk,” Tim Swafford said. “There was never a guarantee.”For years, Hunter relied on a speech tablet to communicate while attending speech therapy multiple times a week at his school and a local hospital in his Ohio hometown. But over time, through years of therapy, practice and determination, Hunter began making progress.Then, in sixth grade, he discovered music.“Do the words come easier to you when you're singing?” Hearst sister station WLWT asked Hunter.“Yes. Yes,” he replied with a smile.Music quickly became more than just a hobby. Hunter says singing helps him feel calm, confident and understood.“Singing feels freeing to me,” he said.Now, he participates in choir and musicals — and recently performed a solo during his school’s choir concert.Despite nerves before taking the stage, Hunter delivered the performance in front of a packed auditorium.“I was nervous a lot, and I was shaking, thinking I'd mess up,” Hunter said.His father recorded the performance while trying to hold back tears.“Seeing him go out there and just perform like that, it just shows all the effort that he's put into this,” Tim Swafford said.After the concert, Hunter told his parents that classmates formed a tunnel to celebrate him as he walked off stage, high-fiving him and congratulating him on the performance.“That right there was so special to us,” his father said. “That’s all he wants. He wants to be accepted by his peers.”The family hopes Hunter’s story inspires other children and families facing challenges of their own.“I want this story out to all the kids that struggle every day with a disability,” Tim Swafford said. “Don’t give up because you're no different than nobody else.”Hunter echoed that message himself.“Don’t give up about your dreams,” he said. “Do not give up.”

Freshman high school student Hunter Swafford loves the Cincinnati Bengals, WWE, video games and country music.

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Like many 14-year-olds, his bedroom is packed with sports memorabilia, Funko Pops and posters of his favorite athletes and entertainers.

But behind the collections and teenage hobbies is a journey years in the making.

“When he sings, his voice comes out,” Hunter’s father, Tim Swafford, said.

Hunter was diagnosed with apraxia when he was 4 years old — a speech disorder that makes it difficult for the brain and mouth to work together to form words.

His father said doctors initially warned the family that Hunter may not fully speak until he was 18 years old.

“They told me, actually, that it would probably be about 18 if he does talk,” Tim Swafford said. “There was never a guarantee.”

For years, Hunter relied on a speech tablet to communicate while attending speech therapy multiple times a week at his school and a local hospital in his Ohio hometown.

But over time, through years of therapy, practice and determination, Hunter began making progress.

Then, in sixth grade, he discovered music.

“Do the words come easier to you when you're singing?” Hearst sister station WLWT asked Hunter.

“Yes. Yes,” he replied with a smile.

Music quickly became more than just a hobby. Hunter says singing helps him feel calm, confident and understood.

“Singing feels freeing to me,” he said.

Now, he participates in choir and musicals — and recently performed a solo during his school’s choir concert.

Despite nerves before taking the stage, Hunter delivered the performance in front of a packed auditorium.

“I was nervous a lot, and I was shaking, thinking I'd mess up,” Hunter said.

His father recorded the performance while trying to hold back tears.

“Seeing him go out there and just perform like that, it just shows all the effort that he's put into this,” Tim Swafford said.

After the concert, Hunter told his parents that classmates formed a tunnel to celebrate him as he walked off stage, high-fiving him and congratulating him on the performance.

“That right there was so special to us,” his father said. “That’s all he wants. He wants to be accepted by his peers.”

The family hopes Hunter’s story inspires other children and families facing challenges of their own.

“I want this story out to all the kids that struggle every day with a disability,” Tim Swafford said. “Don’t give up because you're no different than nobody else.”

Hunter echoed that message himself.

“Don’t give up about your dreams,” he said. “Do not give up.”

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