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Hello! Long time listener, first time caller, etc. In a past life (i.e. in my late 20s), I was an academic; I later transitioned to teaching in my 30s. I taught EFL for about for a total of four years in South Korea, and taught ESL to adults for about three years when I came home. (Ha, a severe stutterer teaching ESL, and speaking at that. I was pretty good at it too; the irony is not lost on me.) After the pandemic started, I switched to a retail job, and now I'm doing custodial/janitorial work at my church. And I'll be very honest, talking purely about myself, I don't think my stutter really was much of an issue. During my time teaching adults, students would occaisionally laugh at me when I stuttered; I'd ask them to explain (in English) exactly what they were laughing at, and why, and that would be enough to shut them up. When the kids would laugh at me, I'd just ignore them. I'd built up enough of a rapport and respect with the kids already that it wasn't a huge issue. Overall, most of my job struggles have come from just trying to survive in the post-capitalist techno-dystopia that is our world... I admit I'm getting off-topic, but another "job" I have is currently being a student in a year-long writing program, and during workshop one person obnoxiously told me to "...just relax, slow down, it's okay...", and also tried to finish my sentences. I had to immediately stop them and tell them that that's extremely rude and inapprorpriate to do for someone like me; in addition to being ableist, they think they're helping but it only makes it worse.