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I’m a project manager. I give presentations and lead large projects and meetings every day. Won’t let this shit hold me back!...
Not entirely but I do see one or two post every time I open this app that’s about being rejected from a job over their stuttering....
I have some unique characteristics with my stutter (I personally believe).
I have some unique characteristics with my stutter (I personally believe). I’ve had problems of stuttering since I could begin speaking from a young age, and over the years it has gotten better (my pa...
It's not the worst job but as a detective it can be hard sometimes but also the long silence is also sometimes good in interviews, they think it's some tactic, when really it's just getting my shit to...
voice actor, negotiator, radio dj, auctioneer, traffic controller, speech therapist, president (and I love Biden), lawyer, interviewer, financial advisor, leader in a fast-paced, large-scale organizat...
What’s the worst job someone with a stutter could have?
What’s the worst job someone with a stutter could have? ...
One of the better posts I’ve seen on here in awhile. It’s all true. I went into the Navy and that helped me a lot. Lied to get in of course. I don’t lie much but it had to be done. I still recall my f...
Love this. Confidence and mentality are the two things I preach that help with stuttering. Similar to myself, working as an associate and going through the ranks to manager. It’s not impossible, and ...
Be a confident stutterer
Be a confident stutterer I improved my confidence by continuing to throw myself into situations where I'm forced to speak. Simple things like ordering food at restaurants, asking store associates que...
Oh man. I’m 33 now and my fluency comes and goes in waves (which is pretty common). I’m not going to lie, it’s been HARD. I used to avoid situations where I had to speak in public like the plague. I’m...
If you barely stuttered, then it's likely that there are other reasons you didn't get the job. That still sucks a lot, but hopefully the experience encouraged you to keep applying and keep interviewin...
I'm 33 and I used to worry it's been holding me back so I avoided jobs where it's important to speak quickly and fluently. I worked in customer service and some clients would assume I was slow lol, an...
37 years old and have had a stutter my entire life, mine goes deeper with also having trouble recalling words or adding sounds to words in order to say them and using alternate words that are similar ...
Stuttering is coming back
Stuttering is coming back Hi All. I went to a week long course when I was a kid (12 years old) to assist with stuttering. Here they taught breathing exercises to me and my parents for how to manage s...
A lot of people smirk or chuckle when they think I'm "just being funny," mostly my coworkers. I find patients are the one to make me feel stupid but it's definitely not all of them. You just have to m...
Future nurse here who also stutters. Has any worker or patient brought up your stutter as a negative ? I’m pretty confident but my stutter brings it down soooo much. Just saying patient names and med...
I’m in my 50’s - much more fluent now but I definitely remember the heartache of stuttering badly at work. I did my best to be fluent - I spent most of my days hiding t stutter- it was so futile. Luck...
I'm 40 and I've pretty much stuttered my whole life. It's definitely not been easy. I'm a nurse and I feel like my professional life is stalled where it is. I've been essentially told I don't have the...
I think companies are ableist towards stuttering people. If average people/company think about disabled person they think about wheelchair or seriously mental ill, Stuttering as invisible trait is abs...
Women who stutter, how does stuttering affect your life?
Women who stutter, how does stuttering affect your life? I'm a woman who stutters and I'd like to hear stories from other women on this sub about your experiences with stuttering. It's pretty hard to...