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I don't think you are entitled, I think the same, I realized it not long ago. A sibling of a friend kinda forced me to read a book where it tells techniques to stop stuttering, they say it worked on them. I started it but It's just something I don't feel like doing cuz I want to accept my stutter and not feel shame everytime I loose my concentration and it gets noticed. It portrays stuttering like a thing that you need to get rid of it. Unless it's a serious problem in your everyday life (and you want to truly be fluent) we shouldn't feel like we are broken or lesser than people who speaks fluently. Also personally, I would have loved when being a child to see someone in the media being an stutterer without the "dumb/antisocial/creepy" trope attached to it. I've worked as a cashier and other jobs where I have to talk to strangers and no one batted an eye when I sutter, people are comprehensive.. (sorry for any mistakes, I'm not native english speaker)