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That's really kind of you! I appreciate it. I think many young people like me were/are influenced by TV and movies obviously. When I was like 13-14 maybe, the Adam Sandler movie Billy Madison came out. His character has to go back to complete all school grades starting in 1st grade to earn his inheritance. Early in the film he's in a classroom and kid is asked to read aloud, and the kid stutters. Sandler's character yells "ta-ta-ta-today, junior!" and the classroom erupts with laughter. The theater I was in erupted with laughter. And people like me said that to ANY TIME someone tripped on words, for YEARS. The toxicity of a grown man, one of the biggest comedy stars in the world, idolized by kids and teens for being cool, lovable, goofy, showed us how to make fun of kids who stutter and that cruelty filtered out and stuck for literally a decade. Sandler would say, I'm sure, "that was a CHARACTER, not me, and the character was a jerk." But that does not matter at all. The kid who stuttered was the punchline and every kid in America gobbled that up and repeated it daily any time someone tripped on words. It was insanely toxic and I partook in that. I hate that it happened and remind myself of that every time I get a little tired, or money is a little tight, and I think about slowing down with my promotion of the film. I keep going, because I want to right that wrong.