Reader Report – They said he was disrespectful. He was overwhelmed.
He was five years old.
Didn’t like bells.
Didn’t like hugs from strangers.
Didn’t like when the lunchroom smelled like bleach and sadness.
He loved dinosaurs.
Loved spinning in circles to think.
Loved silence, and order, and patterns.
But what he didn’t love—
was being told he was wrong
for not looking people in the eye.
“It’s just respect,” they said.
As if social cues matter more than sensory ones.
As if forcing eye contact is a lesson, not a trigger.
They wrote him up.
Called it insubordination.
Put him in “reset room” for refusing to say hi.
He started hiding under desks.
Started pulling at his sleeves until they ripped.
Started whispering, “I’m sorry”
for things that weren’t wrong.
They punished his panic.
They misread his meltdown.
They mistook survival for defiance.
I asked for an aide.
They gave me a pamphlet.
I asked for patience.
They gave me detention slips.
I asked for compassion.
They gave me silence.
What breaks me still
isn’t just what happened.
It’s how many parents nod when I tell this story—
because it happened to their child too.
This is the Real Whirld.
Where neurodivergence is criminalized
before it’s even diagnosed.
Where a five-year-old learns
that being misunderstood
is more dangerous than being wrong.
