Imagine bringing a child into this world, loving them, and getting excited for all their milestones, and then it turns out there's something wrong inside their head that makes them violent and want to harm others. That would break my heart.
3:50 it sounds like this kid was being abused himself. Children that young dont understand what or why those actions are potentially harmful, and replicate the behavoir because its normalized to them. Sounds like it needs to be investigated
"abby" is not a sociopath. extreme Attention seeking behavior is very common for kids who just don't get enough attention at home. She just needs therapy and help and she will proably grow out of it if its treated properly
My teachers were worried about me being a sociopath cause my dad joked about me, calling me his “sweet little sociopath”. As his oldest son, they were scared, of course. But, they learned quickly that he just called me that cause I was a darling little boy who loved to commit mischief with the cutest smile (I dunno why, I was just the cutest little boy, enough that I was mistaken for a girl), so he called me his sweet little sociopath. The teachers learned that I was actually an ok kid, I just had a bit of a rebellious streak, but I was still very nice.
A dude a coworker trained apparently muttered how he'd stab whoever. We're cooks, so we have access to knives and fire and can be surprisingly stressful, and let's face it, we all know someone we don't like, but it wasn't that. Him and 2 other coworkers separately told me he was psycho and scary.
The most disturbing cases are the ones that are afraid of themselves. They know what they do is wrong and don't even want to do it, but they have instinctive urges against their better judgment.
I turn stuff like this on to remind me of all the psycho/socio children I went to school with and met throughout the years. And strangers want to preach how to discipline your kids? A happy story from me is; I knew an older woman who drove a shortbus for the special needs children. She said she wouldn't trade it for anything, they don't ever act "ugly" on purpose. And having a smaller group, she got to know about each child individually. I think I would like to do that in my retirement years.....
I had an FAS student. He and I did pretty well together because I ignored everything but blood. I just made him sit down. One day that backfired. He had a lighter. I didn’t yank it from him but instead went on with class. He tried to set fire to the girl who would later become valedictorian. He failed in his effort and was sent to the principal who blamed me. My comment was that if I concentrated on everything this kid did, nothing else in class would ever get done unless he wanted me to let the kid walk the halls like his previous teachers allowed rather than work with him in class. I had sooooooo many students like him. I no longer teach public school.
If I had a kid like this, I’d do everything in my power to get them help. And if the help didn’t work and they remained a threat to others anyway, I’d try to find a way to off them and make it look like an accident. Spare the world from a monster.
I may or may not be a psycho, but I recall this incident back in 8th or 9th grade where our teacher (I called him King Cuck) was asking the class a question. He said if we were driving on an empty road one night and a kid appeared on the middle of the road what would we do. I was the only one who answered honestly. Said I'd run that kid over and sleep like a baby after. Said the rest of my class would too, even it they said otherwise. A few seconds of awkward silence later and he continued the lesson like I said nothing.
I love stray in the background
Imagine bringing a child into this world, loving them, and getting excited for all their milestones, and then it turns out there's something wrong inside their head that makes them violent and want to harm others. That would break my heart.
I would be so proud and enlighten them on the best practices and methods.
@@MadMikeRyan.for real?
@@goodnightmyprince6734It's important as a parent to support and encourage your children on their path of life 😌.
@@goodnightmyprince6734yes help them exercise their second amendment rights.
@@parkerwebb3470naw ☠️
3:50 it sounds like this kid was being abused himself. Children that young dont understand what or why those actions are potentially harmful, and replicate the behavoir because its normalized to them. Sounds like it needs to be investigated
"abby" is not a sociopath. extreme Attention seeking behavior is very common for kids who just don't get enough attention at home. She just needs therapy and help and she will proably grow out of it if its treated properly
My teachers were worried about me being a sociopath cause my dad joked about me, calling me his “sweet little sociopath”. As his oldest son, they were scared, of course. But, they learned quickly that he just called me that cause I was a darling little boy who loved to commit mischief with the cutest smile (I dunno why, I was just the cutest little boy, enough that I was mistaken for a girl), so he called me his sweet little sociopath. The teachers learned that I was actually an ok kid, I just had a bit of a rebellious streak, but I was still very nice.
Last one, sounded like a Psychopath.
Perceived intelligent.
Smart enough to know not to harm other's items directly. i.e, being stealthy.
Love the Tiny Rick reference 🤣
A dude a coworker trained apparently muttered how he'd stab whoever. We're cooks, so we have access to knives and fire and can be surprisingly stressful, and let's face it, we all know someone we don't like, but it wasn't that. Him and 2 other coworkers separately told me he was psycho and scary.
The most disturbing cases are the ones that are afraid of themselves. They know what they do is wrong and don't even want to do it, but they have instinctive urges against their better judgment.
that is actually really scary.
I turn stuff like this on to remind me of all the psycho/socio children I went to school with and met throughout the years. And strangers want to preach how to discipline your kids? A happy story from me is; I knew an older woman who drove a shortbus for the special needs children. She said she wouldn't trade it for anything, they don't ever act "ugly" on purpose. And having a smaller group, she got to know about each child individually. I think I would like to do that in my retirement years.....
I had an FAS student. He and I did pretty well together because I ignored everything but blood. I just made him sit down. One day that backfired. He had a lighter. I didn’t yank it from him but instead went on with class. He tried to set fire to the girl who would later become valedictorian. He failed in his effort and was sent to the principal who blamed me. My comment was that if I concentrated on everything this kid did, nothing else in class would ever get done unless he wanted me to let the kid walk the halls like his previous teachers allowed rather than work with him in class. I had sooooooo many students like him. I no longer teach public school.
Funfact: It's Harder to be Last than it is being first
facts!
Cool game
What is the name of the background game?
If I had a kid like this, I’d do everything in my power to get them help. And if the help didn’t work and they remained a threat to others anyway, I’d try to find a way to off them and make it look like an accident. Spare the world from a monster.
I may or may not be a psycho, but I recall this incident back in 8th or 9th grade where our teacher (I called him King Cuck) was asking the class a question.
He said if we were driving on an empty road one night and a kid appeared on the middle of the road what would we do. I was the only one who answered honestly.
Said I'd run that kid over and sleep like a baby after. Said the rest of my class would too, even it they said otherwise. A few seconds of awkward silence later and he continued the lesson like I said nothing.
First
Last
Nevermind not last.
🥇