Teachers who've seen students later on become criminals, what were the signs?

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Пікірлер: 241

  • @willofficialRBLX
    @willofficialRBLX5 ай бұрын

    Second. Can I get a pin? I have seen almost a of you videos. Proud to be a subscriber!

  • @RexTheFem

    @RexTheFem

    5 ай бұрын

    pin beggar, and also exclaiming on what number of comment he is, this kid is the epitome of an annoying commenter

  • @willofficialRBLX

    @willofficialRBLX

    5 ай бұрын

    13@TheUnitAce

  • @willofficialRBLX

    @willofficialRBLX

    5 ай бұрын

    WAIT NO WAIT NO WAY I ACTUALLY GOT PINNED

  • @willofficialRBLX

    @willofficialRBLX

    5 ай бұрын

    TY SPARK!!!

  • @uncommonusername

    @uncommonusername

    5 ай бұрын

    My name is Walter Hartwell White. I live at 308 Negra Arroyo Lane, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87104. This is my confession. If you're watching this tape, I'm probably dead, murdered by my brother-in-law Hank Schrader. Hank has been building a meth empire for over a year now and using me as his chemist. Shortly after my 50th birthday, Hank came to me with a rather, shocking proposition. He asked that I use my chemistry knowledge to cook methamphetamine, which he would then sell using his connections in the drug world. Connections that he made through his career with the DEA. I was... astounded, I... I always thought that Hank was a very moral man and I was... thrown, confused, but I was also particularly vulnerable at the time, something he knew and took advantage of. I was reeling from a cancer diagnosis that was poised to bankrupt my family. Hank took me on a ride along, and showed me just how much money even a small meth operation could make. And I was weak. I didn't want my family to go into financial ruin so I agreed. Every day, I think back at that moment with regret. I quickly realized that I was in way over my head, and Hank had a partner, a man named Gustavo Fring, a businessman. Hank essentially sold me into servitude to this man, and when I tried to quit, Fring threatened my family. I didn't know where to turn. Eventually, Hank and Fring had a falling out. From what I can gather, Hank was always pushing for a greater share of the business, to which Fring flatly refused to give him, and things escalated. Fring was able to arrange, uh I guess I guess you call it a "hit" on my brother-in-law, and failed, but Hank was seriously injured, and I wound up paying his medical bills which amounted to a little over $177,000. Upon recovery, Hank was bent on revenge, working with a man named Hector Salamanca, he plotted to kill Fring, and did so. In fact, the bomb that he used was built by me, and he gave me no option in it. I have often contemplated suicide, but I'm a coward. I wanted to go to the police, but I was frightened. Hank had risen in the ranks to become the head of the Albuquerque DEA, and about that time, to keep me in line, he took my children from me. For 3 months he kept them. My wife, who up until that point, had no idea of my criminal activities, was horrified to learn what I had done, why Hank had taken our children. We were scared. I was in Hell, I hated myself for what I had brought upon my family. Recently, I tried once again to quit, to end this nightmare, and in response, he gave me this. I can't take this anymore. I live in fear every day that Hank will kill me, or worse, hurt my family. I... All I could think to do was to make this video in hope that the world will finally see this man, for what he really is.

  • @colleens1107
    @colleens11075 ай бұрын

    I’m impressed by the kid who actually went to the teacher to get help to protect others from him. There is hope for him because he recognizes his tendencies and wanted to be stopped

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    5 ай бұрын

    He actually has a chance. He may be schizophrenic rather than psychopathic, in which case medication might make all the difference. Regardless, he’s safe.

  • @Lily_of_the_Forest

    @Lily_of_the_Forest

    5 ай бұрын

    Heh, tell that to the poor animals.

  • @EMERGENCYRESPONSEVIC

    @EMERGENCYRESPONSEVIC

    4 ай бұрын

    Timestamp?

  • @nicktheguy_

    @nicktheguy_

    4 ай бұрын

    ​​@@Lily_of_the_Forestwhar

  • @a_KattyCorn

    @a_KattyCorn

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Lily_of_the_Forestas much as I feel about the kittens; he’d realize that his urges would compel him to do more and move to bigger and bigger targets. Killers often kill small animals before gradually moving up to actual humans. The fact that he took a step back and realized he was capable of harming others; he took responsibility.

  • @NiaJustNia
    @NiaJustNia5 ай бұрын

    I work in a primary school, and you can generally tell who will end up with a criminal record with some confidence. Not necessarily murderers, but definitely be on the wrong side of the law. There's a few that already give off warning signs for being future domestic abusers if intervention doesn't happen, especially some of the girls. The toxic ideas they have over "normal" relationship behaviour makes me very concerned they've witnessed their mothers abuse their fathers physically and emotionally.

  • @Queena90

    @Queena90

    5 ай бұрын

    I wish it were legal and not frowned upon for teachers to tell parents “ur kids fucked up”while they still might have a chance of saving them. Maybe some siblings won’t have to suffer at the hands of these horrible children if teachers could tell parents thier kid might b a criminal in the future

  • @CatsAreAwesome146

    @CatsAreAwesome146

    5 ай бұрын

    Bring back the frigging ruler

  • @qiralyncassette

    @qiralyncassette

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@Queena90 that's counting on the parents... Giving a damn...

  • @amethyst1062

    @amethyst1062

    26 күн бұрын

    No just normalize the previous reply, the ruler traumatizes and mentally disables kids by pain trauma

  • @MonaLyssa33
    @MonaLyssa335 ай бұрын

    My brother was probably the kid that all the teachers thought would end up a criminal, to be honest, our whole family thought the same because of some severe mental health issues. He did not turn out to be a criminal though and he stabilized in his 20s. He works in a good IT job and is engaged. Definitely a different person than we all were expecting but grateful it was a good outcome.

  • @ZombieOfBerlin
    @ZombieOfBerlin5 ай бұрын

    Story 4 actually flew over my head for a moment. Been a while since I thought about the HP universe. To be fair, Tom did become very, shall we say, influential....

  • @lianamyself

    @lianamyself

    5 ай бұрын

    my first thought was how did dumbledore get on social media

  • @AMoodytable

    @AMoodytable

    5 ай бұрын

    All this seems to fit the book too well to be a coincidence...

  • @jucheidea9118

    @jucheidea9118

    5 ай бұрын

    Dummbledore got the latest iphone

  • @TheKenchanx

    @TheKenchanx

    5 ай бұрын

    Somehow, i realized it was about him, even before the reveal. Uncanny.

  • @MHShah17

    @MHShah17

    5 ай бұрын

    ​​@@TheKenchanx same, it fit Tom riddle/ Voldemort too well, but doesn't sound like it's from Dumbledore but Slughorn

  • @Matt-mv5tt
    @Matt-mv5tt5 ай бұрын

    My favorite part about this channel is that it's not some AI voiceover, or if it is it is a ridiculously good one. Either way it feels more like I'm just chilling with some guy who's sharing a collection of stories he's heard about some thing or another

  • @WomanRoaring

    @WomanRoaring

    Ай бұрын

    i don't think it's an AI voice. he has talked about his personal life before. he occasionally mispronounces things and will say, i'm not sure how this is pronounced, i looked it up but i'm not confident in how i'm pronouncing it. this is also why i listen to this channel, i hate the AI voices or people who routinely mispronounce words when they're not AI. he's pretty good, he also adds his opinions sometimes which i like. it's like you get to know him and are listening to a friend tell a story rather than just hearing a story.

  • @wandereringshadow8658
    @wandereringshadow86585 ай бұрын

    Not a teacher, but the fact that the kid was always agreeable and never seemed angry at all. Like, never. Even when there were situations where he should've very much been expressing anger. Around 10 years later hes doing 15 years for snapping and killing some dude in a violent rage.

  • @sherrellbennett1333
    @sherrellbennett13335 ай бұрын

    My son's 6th grade teacher told me that he was a born leader, but he led everyone in the wrong direction. The same teacher also put my son's desk outside the classroom because he was so disruptive. He was well behaved and sweet at home. He grew up to be a career criminal I'm sorry to say. He is actually brilliant, an author with a high IQ. Go figure.

  • @jengsci8268

    @jengsci8268

    5 ай бұрын

    Ro?

  • @Fairiegurl101

    @Fairiegurl101

    2 ай бұрын

    Reminds me of my brother. Very charming, very smart, but in brother's case, he fortunately has very little drive. He likes simple things and generally doesn't do anything he deems as being too "hard". Hard could mean time consuming or boring or basically any reason not to do something. It used to drive me nuts as a kid, since I basically had to raise him and our sister, but now that we're both adults, I can rest easy knowing he isn't going to do something hard like rob a bank.

  • @WomanRoaring

    @WomanRoaring

    Ай бұрын

    one of my uncles has a high IQ as well. He was told in high school and he'd planned on going to college, he was born in the mid 50's, so most people didn't go to college at the time. So when he realized he was smarter than most he started expecting everyone to just do what he said because he was smarter. he didn't finish college and expected to be handed a high paying job. he ended up in and out of jail for drugs, child touching, check theft and other things. he's mostly homeless now as none of us want to deal with his BS. I'm pretty sure he's a narcissist as well. so he's about 70 and has wasted his life, talent and IQ. My. mom used to call him Mr. know it all, he was very annoying in how he just bossed everyone around, no matter how smart someone is, it's annoying when all they do is tell you, you're wrong and this is how you should do something while they can't do that thing.

  • @Catstimesinfinity
    @Catstimesinfinity5 ай бұрын

    I asked for help multiple times through school. I wasnt exhibiting these signs but i was so confused about everything. People bullied me, I couldnt understand math or reading, my thoughts were fast and tangled. I was told that i didnt need extra help, I was fine the way I was and I was just being lazy. I ended up skipping almost all of p.e, all of science 10, took only art classes in grade 12 because they were easy to pass (barely had to make art and i could pass). I started smoking pot when I was 14. Turns out I have inattentive adhd. Because I wasnt diagnosed, i learnt barely anything in school and have so much cpsd that my head spins when im standing still. Im 33 now and my husband is am amazing support, I am so lucky to have him (we almost divorced in 2021, glad we didnt)

  • @haplessasshole9615

    @haplessasshole9615

    5 ай бұрын

    So glad you found a partner you can rely on. I suspect a _lot_ of couples came close to divorce after the stress of 2020 and early 2021. I'm happy to hear you two weathered the storm. Have you gotten your GED? If not, it's never too late. Believe me, with one-on-one tutoring, you'll go farther than you can imagine. I'm a former volunteer GED tutor. I helped one young woman get her GED so she could have a crime expunged from her record. Her other goal was to earn enough to send her toddler daughter to a private school. I know she achieved the one goal, and I hope she did the other, too. Another woman was similar to you. I was confused as to why she wasn't progressing, because I could tell she was quite intelligent. It clicked one evening when I realized she could read a short paragraph aloud quite fluently, but couldn't tell me what it was about. She lost track of the train of thought somewhere along the line -- she had ADHD. I found a place where she could be tested (thus scoring another resource for my learning center, too), and it was confirmed. I hope she was able to get the more specialized help I, as only a volunteer, was unable to offer. But at least I helped her get a diagnosis. If you _do_ have your GED, consider becoming a tutor. Don't be scared of the math. You'll find that, when you break the concepts down verbally for someone else, you'll understand them better yourself. You just need to be one lesson ahead of your student. Your learning center will also give you all the support you need. Since you've been down the same educational road, they'll know they can trust you. Sorry for the essay. GED tutoring is one of my pet causes, and I do tend to run on about it!

  • @Slurpee_Burger

    @Slurpee_Burger

    14 күн бұрын

    Every marriage has rough patches and the rough patches are the signs to pursue them with everything you have in you ❤️

  • @calzstevenson7017
    @calzstevenson70175 ай бұрын

    That comment about 'glad it's not an innocent person '.. that's terribly low, drug dealers are still people & don't deserve death. Most people who deal drugs do so because the system failed them & they learn to survive. Most people don't suddenly decide they want to become a criminal, it's just sad people blame the victims all because perpetrators were born in a better situation.

  • @AmGaming-qd8vo

    @AmGaming-qd8vo

    5 ай бұрын

    fully agreed

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    5 ай бұрын

    Most street level dealers are addicts themselves. I have a great deal of sympathy for them. Those who aren’t addicts and choose to deal drugs be cause it’s exciting, less drudgery than a regular job, they’re in a different category altogether.

  • @JDC2890
    @JDC28905 ай бұрын

    Story 7 is tragic. Not only were poor, defenceless kittens murdered, but murder attempts on humans as well by a boy who couldn't seem to control himself despite actually wanting NOT to be like this is really screwed up.

  • @83gemm
    @83gemm5 ай бұрын

    I taught first grade. You can see exactly what’s going to happen to most kids. It’s depressingly predictable. Honestly makes you doubt free will.

  • @pompe221

    @pompe221

    5 ай бұрын

    My mom taught kindergarten in a small town and said something similar. She could predict who was going to be a disruptive child before the school year started because of who that child's older siblings were. Most if not all the "problem kids" had terrible home lives.

  • @Lily_of_the_Forest

    @Lily_of_the_Forest

    5 ай бұрын

    I doubt free will too 😢

  • @littlepinkskeleton
    @littlepinkskeleton5 ай бұрын

    I was probably that kid. I experienced a lot of bullying and as a result started acting out. The teachers didn't help and often made it worse e.g shaming me in front of the other kids. I developed some genuinely bad traits as a defence mechanism that I had to unlearn for years.

  • @churchofpos2279
    @churchofpos22795 ай бұрын

    Not a teacher, but we had the "strange" kid in our class. Something was totally off about him. During our senior year, he killed his sister and 2 of her friends because they refused to let play with a BB gun. He ended up in prison, but was eventually released.

  • @mirzam.4976

    @mirzam.4976

    5 ай бұрын

    How many years did he spend in prison?

  • @carlasghost656
    @carlasghost6565 ай бұрын

    I did substitute teaching for a while. I used to think teachers referring to students as babysitting them until they can be charged as adults was some sort of joke. It isn't. Go into any teacher's lounge and ask, anonymously, for a list of kids they know will either end up dead, in prison, or accepting lifetime welfare benefits for their kids and they'll list most of the same ones. By eighth grade most are showing every red flag going. By tenth they have a lengthy juvenile record started.

  • @craigbell8373
    @craigbell83735 ай бұрын

    This is why teachers need to be higher paid, this stuff is horrifying.

  • @debbylou5729

    @debbylou5729

    5 ай бұрын

    Really? Are they rotating three shifts a day? Are they working nights? Cops are dealing with ALL of this in its later stages and are criticized at every stage. Maybe put body cams on them? With benefits and months off teacher make more than the cops

  • @EmmanuellaUdofia

    @EmmanuellaUdofia

    5 ай бұрын

    Wtf u on about mate​@@debbylou5729

  • @lucasokeefe7935

    @lucasokeefe7935

    5 ай бұрын

    You sound like one of those entitled dependapottamus PTA Karens that demands respect for their husbands rank.

  • @GiordanDiodato

    @GiordanDiodato

    4 ай бұрын

    @@debbylou5729 where tf did you hear that? you need a reality check. teachers are severely underpaid and cops are supposed to protect and serve, not shoot first ask questions later.

  • @MeemahSN

    @MeemahSN

    4 күн бұрын

    @@debbylou5729 Many, many cops are corrupt and only reinforce these crimes. For a system that is supposed to protect us, it's really bad at actually doing its job. There are good cops who deserve support, but so many are power-hungry bastards who don't care about keeping people safe.

  • @albionflux
    @albionflux5 ай бұрын

    Even before you said horcrux i was thinking this sounds like voldemort

  • @PinkAgaricus
    @PinkAgaricus5 ай бұрын

    I understand story 9 since that's exactly what happened after I aged out of all of that support. No psychiatrist and other actually helpful professionals. Students who are Developmentally Disabled/Challenged and/or suffering from other neurodivergencies fall through the cracks after leaving High School/Secondary Education. It's not easy finding an adult psychiatrist in medical systems covered by health insurance when a majority of them are child psychiatrists.

  • @Pokemon-Kid112
    @Pokemon-Kid1125 ай бұрын

    I had a thing for starting fires as a kid, was diagnosed with ADHD at 9, put on the right medication, and, apart from my chiminea, candles and cigarettes, i haven't started any fires since. Arson can be a sign of undiagnosed ADHD.

  • @jackster2352

    @jackster2352

    5 ай бұрын

    Very true, makes you feel like Jack from lord of the flies or something😂. Seriously though, I did something with a fire and got put in a ward for a couple weeks.

  • @Avrysatos
    @Avrysatos5 ай бұрын

    I’m glad the teacher took the kid who wanted to not hurt people seriously.

  • @the_sniffer123
    @the_sniffer1235 ай бұрын

    Thanks bro for posting so often. You seriously got me through some stuff.

  • @tibi2558

    @tibi2558

    5 ай бұрын

    Such a nice first comment :), just hang in there and you will get through whatever it is you are dealing with!

  • @the_sniffer123

    @the_sniffer123

    5 ай бұрын

    @@tibi2558 thank you 😊

  • @mannydcbianco
    @mannydcbianco5 ай бұрын

    Not a teacher but a kid in school (grades 4 through 6) had absolutely zero impulse control. None. Usually it wasn't violent stuff, but rather things like taking a poop in a hallway in school, setting fire to a trash can, or randomly breaking a window. All things done to either get attention, or as a dare. When he got angry though it would get violent, every time. He once threw a ~15 pound concrete block at the back of another student who had his back turned and broke a few ribs, and once he tried to gouge another student's eyes out with a key. No one was surprised to learn that a dozen or so years later he was in prison for stabbing someone in the eye with a screwdriver.

  • @TheTwin12321
    @TheTwin123215 ай бұрын

    I worked with children that are mentally, socially and developmentally disabled. I can think of a few that will end up with a criminal record. They will not be the ones that did the violent crime, they are plainly too dumb for it. But they will be accessory to a crime. Thise kids trust others too much, since they know that others usually know more. They are a easy target to get to help with crimes. They don't know it is illegal to be a lookout or be the getaway driver, and if someone tells them it is legal they will believe it. They are not capable to look for this information on their own. In the school we try to teach them about things being illegal, but they tend to forget stuff within minutes. One of the kids had brought in illegal fireworks. A teacher found this and they had a chat about it for half an hour. They talk ended with the student being able and having to tell the teacher that this was illegal, the consequences and what the next (correct) steps were. The kid is let out of the classroom, and within 5 minutes set of the fireworks on school grounds. This kid and one friend had to spend a few hours in a police cell over this.

  • @jgrasell
    @jgrasell5 ай бұрын

    The top priority should be protecting the other students, teachers and staff.

  • @sanneoi6323
    @sanneoi63235 ай бұрын

    I haven't been incarcerated in my adult life (yet), but I did go to juvie when I was 16 because of some stupid dare from idiot friends. I robbed an illegal moonshiner warehouse... if I'd been caught I'd probably have been killed, then I went on to drink a faulty jar and almost die from that. Police were waiting as I got up from getting my stomach pumped. Wonder if any of my teachers could've foreseen it.

  • @XFizzlepop-Berrytwist
    @XFizzlepop-Berrytwist5 ай бұрын

    Story 9. After school, many kids stop getting support of any kind. Parents kick kids out, at 18, without support for example. I just dont get it, why have kids if you dont want them? Like I get it, if your kid is a druggie or maybe just got involved with the wrong people. But if your kid is good hearted, I dont get it. The system that is in place sucks, School basically babysits you until you are 18, then out the door you go, into a life you never were actually prepared for. I think it would be better if schools prepared kids for actual jobs, or trained them in getting certifications for things. A few schools are starting too I think, but not enough.

  • @confusedfrog294

    @confusedfrog294

    5 ай бұрын

    I agree with this, and also, there are some kids who will need support their whole life. Some people will never be able to live alone, or be responsible for a family, and that’s okay and it isn’t their fault. These kids deserve support their whole life, not just in schools. It doesn’t matter how much support someone gets in school if they’re just thrown out the door the second they turn 18. This is especially true for many neurodivergent people.

  • @gloriascientiae7435

    @gloriascientiae7435

    5 ай бұрын

    american problems.

  • @XFizzlepop-Berrytwist

    @XFizzlepop-Berrytwist

    5 ай бұрын

    @@gloriascientiae7435 Yeah? It is an American problem? And?

  • @gloriascientiae7435

    @gloriascientiae7435

    5 ай бұрын

    @@XFizzlepop-Berrytwist Well I mean you and I both have to be happy we don't life in afghanistan, but I definitely think USA could do a bit better on social services. I mean the poverty homelessness and everything, crime, that's just sadist man. And don't let anybody convince you having some social services is the same as socialism, it isn't. Buut considering youguys pay so much taxes it does beg the question why there isn't better healthcare or education or whatever. Usually if you have good systems in place, there is also less crima overtime and actually the overall damage/costs to the state go down as well.

  • @XFizzlepop-Berrytwist

    @XFizzlepop-Berrytwist

    5 ай бұрын

    @@gloriascientiae7435 Drugs is one big problem. “Hood culture.” Is another. US does have a lot of gangs sadly. Homelessness though is the governments fault, its an easy to solve problem, but they are greedy and somewhat tyrannical in some ways, stepping on freedoms.

  • @AMoodytable
    @AMoodytable5 ай бұрын

    A person named Tom who stayed after class to ask about horcruxes who went on to actually commit a murder? Coincidence? I think not.

  • @DreamLionViolet

    @DreamLionViolet

    2 ай бұрын

    They probably murdered a trans person That’s what the author of that series wants!! /hj

  • @sasukedemon888888888

    @sasukedemon888888888

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@DreamLionVioletunnecessary comment is unnecessary.

  • @winchestersons6258
    @winchestersons62585 ай бұрын

    I used to teach high school. Had one student that was always stealing things. Had a meeting with parents. If student x doesnt quit he will end up in prison Had a student always in trouble for fighting. Told parents the same. Said hes going to kill someone day. He did. In jail for life. Had a students doing drugs. Told him to quit. Hes in jail.

  • @maarzwi
    @maarzwi5 ай бұрын

    about the whole home environment thing with violent kids sometimes there is no problem in their home environment, some kids are just born with something wrong, born with a wire crossed I knew a kid in my school who had a very normal life and was treated for some mental condition I couldn't remember the name of, but he was born with it and was very violent He even ended up stabbing me in the bicep with a broken piece of ceramic for seemingly no reason, right on the vein too, he was expelled after that Some people are just bad to begin with

  • @kiepresbal6238
    @kiepresbal62385 ай бұрын

    Story four is just voldemort in hogwarts-

  • @marikothecheetah9342
    @marikothecheetah93425 ай бұрын

    People very often disregard kids as a dangerous because: "oh, they're just kids" mentality. Some kids are real screw-ups and need to be approached unemotionally, for their own good. Some cases mentioned were classic examples of psychopathy ()no, not sociopathy, the inborn psychopathy) and were totally ignored, except for a self-aware psychopath kid. Psychopathy can manifest as early as in a 5 years old kid and yet people still ignore it, because: "it's just a kid." Yeah, a kid, that will grow up into an adult pretty soon and then what? Will you be still saying:" oh, it's just an adult? " Some kids suffer because of their shitty parents, who never face the consequences, are never sterilised and with no help from others they will take the wrong path. But to make it clear - I don't care how much the kid had it bad, if it is a bully - it deserves consequences and a punishment, it needs to be taught consequences of its behaviour. Many murders would have not happened if people didn't go full on: "oh, it's just a kid." Because of this lackadaisical attitude other kids suffer and then other adults suffer. If a kid can be helped - they should be helped, together with revoking parental rights to his folks. Parents get such a leeway in life it's astonishing. You need a licence for a car, baking commercially etc. but not for parenting. In-sane. Also yes, call me cruel, but I would sterilise every damn parent who can only be called "a crap parent".

  • @StudioOfAnimationEntertainment
    @StudioOfAnimationEntertainment5 ай бұрын

    My story is similar to 16, where I eventually had gone the GED route as I am, unfortunately, emotionally stunted (my mom died, and my dad only came back into my life a year before that). The emotional stunting has made it so I can't focus right on my work, and I have failed every class I went to. However! Despite being similar to 17, I am not the student that is gonna go to jail or prison! It's one of my classmates, actually. She knows multiple gas stations here in America to buy vapes and cigarettes, and has actively bought them and brought them in to school. She had, at one time, attempted to get me to drive her around so she could sell weed, too, because she apparently grew it. Not to mention she has a child, despite being two years younger than me (I'm 19). I am quite thankful I don't have anything to do with her now, and I hope she keeps safe and out of jail.

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    5 ай бұрын

    Keep at it, it sounds like you’re doing well.

  • @Townesdavidreed

    @Townesdavidreed

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah.Right

  • @fauxhuman0
    @fauxhuman05 ай бұрын

    I had several warning signs as a kid and still have a lot of these thoughts. I remember loving the sight of blood at *7 years old*. It absolutely terrifies me. I tend to take it out in video games and through art but im scared im gonna actually do something one day. Doesnt help that im also terrified of the adults in my life knowing somethings wrong with me so no one knows. There are even just little manipulative things i do that terrify me, like pretending to be bad at lying so people will believe me more. My brain is not my friend.

  • @daikonasahinacosplay
    @daikonasahinacosplay5 ай бұрын

    this is my second comment and it’s not really a criminal thing but just wanna say sm about my teacher. a kid in my class was acting up and she asked infornt of the whole class “is there something going on at home (kid) ? why are you acting like this” what the hell. ask him outside of class?! another story is I was coming back from my special reading group and I walked in and yelled “IT WAS QUIET IN HERE” she’s rude and humiliates students publicly.

  • @Kumahachi8
    @Kumahachi85 ай бұрын

    I only knew two. One, we absolutely knew about. Same for his little brother. He was basically copying his father who, at this point, was infamous in the community for getting arrested for violent assaults on certain groups of people, in everything he did. It culminated in him nearly getting expelled for throwing a firework underneath a teacher’s car because she was a Catholic and him failing his exams by not taking them in the first place (he spent the entire exams drawing all over his exam sheets, writing racist, sectarian phrases, and trying to distract other people taking the exams until he was forcibly removed). The other one, we never would have known about and it still shocks me to this day. He grew up kind and polite. Pretty much the only person in class who wouldn’t bully me. His dream was to join the RAF, but when we were 15, he met members of the British military at a career day at school and found out that his eyesight was just bad enough that he would never be able to join. His cousin, who had the same dream, had a similar blow the following year when he developed glaucoma and required surgery in one eye. You can’t join the RAF if you’ve had surgery on your eyes or any sort of eye condition, really. The cousin went on to become an engineer outside the military rather than an RAF engineer, but the boy I went to school with was devastated. He fell in with the wrong crowd, but for a time, he was the same as he always was. They had introduced him to cigarettes, though, and nothing he or anybody else did could help him to give up, and his highly religious parents didn’t help matters. Their idea of helping was screaming at him and perpetually grounding him. And then those people he was hanging out with introduced him to alcohol, which he very quickly became addicted to, and various drugs. Last I heard, he had been arrested for assaulting someone over drugs. I suppose it can happen to anyone.

  • @karlrovey
    @karlrovey5 ай бұрын

    Went to high school with a few people who are now murderers. Most of them weren't surprises. The one surprise was the girl involved in the infamous anti-freeze poisonings roughly 10 years ago. No one saw it coming. Only one person even suspected something was wrong prior to the failed third poisoning.

  • @karlrovey

    @karlrovey

    5 ай бұрын

    Oh, I also tutored a student who got involved in smuggling a gun and drugs through the school. She was the one in possession of the gun when her backpack (with the gun inside) broke and fell, resulting in the gun discharging in the cafeteria.

  • @thetightwadhomesteader3089
    @thetightwadhomesteader30895 ай бұрын

    Their was this kid in my 6-7 grade class, he shared more clases in the past. He didn't get along with anyone and always started fights. I definitely didn't think he would have a bright future. Later when he was an adult he was on the news because he knifed a police officer (trying not to trip youtubes censore) the police officer didn't make it. My brother started a lot of fights in school and got kicked out, went to jail a few times. Now he owns his own biz and is pretty much a millionaire. Where I work I see a lot of people on hard drugs and that had a lot of jail time in their past.. Some of them corrected thier lives and others haven't. I convinced one to stop taking hard drugs, I told him i believe in him (he was a good guy) now its up to him to continue on that path.

  • @mdvsue
    @mdvsue5 ай бұрын

    As soon as I heard "Tom" from "a boarding school in England", I knew where it was going.

  • @Caffeinated_Firefly

    @Caffeinated_Firefly

    3 ай бұрын

    Same

  • @laurenheard5187
    @laurenheard51875 ай бұрын

    I've been in a number of different educational roles over the years (daycare, substitute, teacher) and the amount of people that blow off deeply concerning behavior as "ADHD" is...alarming. If you try and say otherwise or say that theres more to the picture than just ADHD, youre labeled as ableist. There's nothing you can do after being labeled as ableist other than just watch the news and wait for their face to be on it.

  • @thedarkside7508
    @thedarkside75085 ай бұрын

    Yeah, that student "Tom"...

  • @RobinOConnor-ex7tk
    @RobinOConnor-ex7tk5 ай бұрын

    Retired teacher here. We used to buy a local paper called "The Slammer". It had all the mug shots and arrest info for the city and surrounding area. At my high school, it was considered required reading.

  • @noodles669
    @noodles6692 ай бұрын

    NAH I WAS SUSPICIOUS WHEN THEY SAID TOM FROM AN ORPHANAGE BUT THE HORCRUXES GOT ME ROLLING 💀💀💀

  • @nicholasdicienzo6150
    @nicholasdicienzo61505 ай бұрын

    I don’t get story 4 at all, is it supposed to be some kind of Riddle?

  • @Rave12612
    @Rave126123 ай бұрын

    Some girl in my grade, she isntt treated very well but she accts like an actual phsycho and likes to make jokes about drowning a cat in a bucket of water, the silence in the room i will remember forever once we realized THAT WAS THE PUNCHLINE she also has bitten teachers and students before and any time she does something she shows ZERO remorse, some kid knocked books out of her hand (i always hated that kid) and then i remember that she was not the type of girl you wanna bully, she sometimes has made some little comments under her breath and i just hear key words like “i wanna” “unalive” and EVEN “stab rapidly” im hoping thats just want she wants to do (in her head) but I PRAY doesnt do anything im starting to think she will. Oh yeah SHE ALSO THINKS SHES A WEREWOLF, WE ARE FARRRRRRRRRR PAST THAT AGE i aint talking no elementary prematurity stuff THATS WHAT CONCERNS ME

  • @carmina-solis
    @carmina-solis15 күн бұрын

    i’ve worked in low-income schools and there are so many kids who will probably have some kind of record just because of their background. it makes me sad.

  • @golfboy4886
    @golfboy48865 ай бұрын

    Parents. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

  • @GiordanDiodato

    @GiordanDiodato

    4 ай бұрын

    not always.

  • @golfboy4886

    @golfboy4886

    4 ай бұрын

    @@GiordanDiodato Not always, but many, many more times than not.

  • @hieveryone406
    @hieveryone4065 ай бұрын

    tom from an orphanage, exceptionally bright and asking about horcruxes? He's going to try and kill Harry Potter soon

  • @Paperplayz.
    @Paperplayz.5 ай бұрын

    Im a kid and I used to be friends with someone who is definitely gonna end up as a murderer, he lived near me and as I got to know him he told me stories of him doing horrible things, then I met his parents, they where horrible. His mom was unemployed and his dad sold baseball cards, they had little to no money but the kid that I used to be friends with would randomly try to brag to everyone in school that he is so rich. After around a year of knowing him I realized he was mean, he started bullying and manipulating. Eventually when I told a teacher he manipulated them into thinking i was the bad person by saying stuff like, “well friends should work things out,” this last part sounds a little messed up but he is know living in a motor home, which I’m kinda happy about because of all the mean things he did, sometimes I feel in his situation but it doesn’t usually last. The sad thing is is that I know that he is gonna go bad places because of this, I don’t even really blame him, how his parents raised him to believe their rich is crazy, he told me one time his dad was a lawyer, which he was not. And when I told the school my concern they didn’t help. So yeah that’s my crazy child experiences.

  • @Onora619
    @Onora6195 ай бұрын

    I've had a few of my fellow students turn out to be violent criminals and literally no one was surprised.

  • @CatsAreAwesome146
    @CatsAreAwesome1465 ай бұрын

    The Harry Potter one made me chuckle

  • @jewellmadden8624
    @jewellmadden86245 ай бұрын

    NO THE VIDEO IS OVERRRRR! Oh, and I decided to subscribe since I've been going to your videos a lot.

  • @IIMiikexDII
    @IIMiikexDII2 ай бұрын

    When I was in 7th grade a kid brought a knife to school and got arrested. It was unclear if he was planning on using it but he got charged for it. Remember seeing his mug shot. The worst part about it was, I had a HUGE problem with bullies in middle school and he was the only kid who was nice to me. Would talk to him every day and nobody messed with me because they were afraid of him. Once he was arrested (and of course expelled), my life became hell until I went to high school and met life long friends. I still wonder what happened to him, wouldn't be surprised if he ended up killing someone and is in prison for life, but I liked hanging out with him. I'm 31 now so this was a long time ago.

  • @ZachT
    @ZachT5 ай бұрын

    I thought story of the kid who killed his girlfriend’s kid while babysitting her sounded familiar, but she had a daughter. There’s a video on KZread of a guy crying in court after killing his girlfriend’s son while babysitting him.

  • @IL_Bgentyl
    @IL_Bgentyl5 ай бұрын

    Teachers told me how hard my life would be not enjoying typical school and belittled me enjoying the military. Now I’m out and make 3-4x what they do

  • @Fabala827
    @Fabala8274 ай бұрын

    2:39 literally before the first sentence was finished 😂😂 “boarding school in England student named Tom” and then I was just waiting to see which teacher it would be from 😂😂 (it was Slughorn, if you were wondering) (although idk why you would know his name but not know it was him “talking” lmao)

  • @crocosnake2761
    @crocosnake27615 ай бұрын

    I thought this would all be serious and so the unexpectancy of a sudden Harry Potter reference got me dying of laughter.

  • @stewmanism
    @stewmanism5 ай бұрын

    My sister adopted a kid with ODD. Told her, as a single mother, to dump him. ODD is another level of mental disorder. I am worried that one day he is going to kill her and my nieces. He is 10 now and has already tried to kill my sister. Once he is stronger than her, he will succeed. My wife is also a school psychologist. She said he has no chance unless he has a two-parent household with one constantly tending to him, which he doesn't have there.

  • @annoyedshedevil

    @annoyedshedevil

    2 ай бұрын

    My brother has ODD, he is amazing. Works with disability services, donated a kidney, hard working and in a comitted relationship. Not everyone with ODD are monsters. smh 🙄

  • @mysteryheart53

    @mysteryheart53

    2 ай бұрын

    My 8 year old cousin with ODD is super violent and destructive and I wouldn’t be surprised if he ended up in juvenile detention by age 15

  • @mysteryheart53

    @mysteryheart53

    2 ай бұрын

    @@annoyedshedevilin my cousin’s case he doesn’t get anywhere near the discipline he needs from his parents

  • @ibnkhaldoun4319
    @ibnkhaldoun43195 ай бұрын

    i moved 10 times before turning 18, & had an unpleasant home life with two very emotionally unstable parents - one disabled. over time i deteriorated. read at a fifth grade level at 4. by 4th/5th/6th grade (2nd & 3rd school) i was not applying myself anymore. it got worse in 7th and 8th (4th school), and by high school (5th, 6th, & 7th school) i stopped caring and got a D average. repeated a year. i wonder what teachers thought of me.

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    5 ай бұрын

    They thought you were a bright (possibly gifted) kid from a very unstable environment. They wished they could do more, but since the re weren’t outward signs of abuse, their hands were tied. (I’m totally leaping to conclusions here…😂).

  • @ibnkhaldoun4319

    @ibnkhaldoun4319

    5 ай бұрын

    @@karenneill9109 teachers were deliriously happy i was reading AT ALL (since video games were a major distraction in the 1990s, & my parents were too cheap to buy me any). i had major issues with only reading easy books and not challenging myself - i tore through the animorphs series and beverly cleary books, but stopped short of trying anything really hard that would enhance my vocabulary, like moby dick or ivanhoe. i'd also have issues with finishing books - i'd start one and then start another. unfortunately, teachers couldn't do much because i was constantly moving. i moved in 1990, 1993, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2004. i then moved for college in 2009 and promptly lost all of my academic headway by drowning myself in booze & partying to make up for all of the formative experiences i missed out on. do you know how isolating it is to always be the new kid and then go to THREE high schools? i never finished college and now bartend and am a shift manager at a sandwich chain, lol. i bore my coworkers by talking about history a lot. maybe i'll finish school someday.

  • @ibnkhaldoun4319

    @ibnkhaldoun4319

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@karenneill9109 what i do have to be thankful for is that i never got hardcore into drugs or got in trouble with the law - and doubly so cuz i have serious anger problems. i have enough of a hole to dig out of as it is. things could have been a hundred times worse, and i had some near misses too.

  • @yanyanyannn_
    @yanyanyannn_4 ай бұрын

    im a student but last year i had a classmate that was really aggressive like he beat up a butch of people(he was sometimes nice to some people, and had a few friends, never picked a fight for no reason unless you piss him off) he would always disturb the class and skip classes a lot, i also saw him hide in the bush with some girl outside i assume the parents gave money to the school so they wouldnt kick him out bc no way the director or the head teachers would keep him for so long one day he came late(comes late often anyway but this one was special) according to the math teacher he looked nervous and washed his hands like 3 times over the lesson and kept searching something in his bag or something(i didnt rlly pay too much attention to these two things until the teacher pointed out) he left early bc he said that he had family problems at first the teacher didnt let him out but later still did like 10 min later police enters the classroom and searched everyones stuff apparently he sold crack to someone when they asked who it might be we did tell them about him and they just left idk what happened with him after

  • @WillowsVeganBakery
    @WillowsVeganBakery3 ай бұрын

    2:34 YES THAT IS A HARRY POTTER JOKE. Tom Riddle later became Lord Voldemort.

  • @lisdraconis2212
    @lisdraconis22124 ай бұрын

    I had to laugh so hard at the 4th story. I was already like "Wait, he was called Tom and was a prime student with convincing and charming ways... reminds me of~" When the word Horcruxes was said I lost it. XD

  • @rockbullet3699
    @rockbullet36995 ай бұрын

    Video released at one in the morning? Hell yeah

  • @daikonasahinacosplay
    @daikonasahinacosplay5 ай бұрын

    guy in my class, ( well used to be, he’s going to Highschool this year ) I was one of his targets, if I’m honest I’m not completely innocent but definitely not as bad as him, he would threaten people, say he once broke a kids ankle in a soccer game, called me ugly,pale, swear words, etc. I hate him. I bet he’s gonna have a criminal record or something for like abuse or physical assault/harassment.

  • @empoleon7750
    @empoleon77503 ай бұрын

    I’m not a teacher, but I knew somebody in an RP community I used to be part of, whom I think is absolutely going to end up on the news someday. This person has done the following: - Made rape threats against another member of the community (The target was also a massive piece of shit; she’d been bullying the aggressor’s friend, and also my friend, for several months at that point, but this was just too far). This was on top of saying some pretty messed-up crap to her. - Spammed porn and gore art outside the NSFW chat of my friend’s Discord server. - Doxxed the aforementioned friend for leaving the community. - Sent me some limp-handed death threats, accompanied by pictures of actual guns. - Has probably done more messed-up crap I’ve just never heard about.

  • @enderger5308
    @enderger5308Ай бұрын

    I may have had warning signs for the conditions I ended up actually having. For me, it was mental health struggles rather than criminality that may eventually end with me institutionalised and completely disconnected from reality. In my youth, I was always paranoid about how others were acting, something which likely showed through on multiple occasions. This paranoia hit its peak in high school, when I figured out that I was living in a cult (the kind that have been known to shun former members), leading me to drag my mental health through the dirt and placing me here, with no idea when my depression will push me back away from reality. I can only hope that my version of reality remains close enough to what is real to avoid hurting someone who my brain makes an enemy.

  • @loyallexi163
    @loyallexi1633 ай бұрын

    To be fair, Tom riddle did go back to visit Dumbledore, when Dumbledore was the teacher that straight up knew he was up to something

  • @FernLeoRootbeer
    @FernLeoRootbeer5 ай бұрын

    I ACTUALLY GOT THE HP ONE LETS GOOO

  • @whiskydaisy58
    @whiskydaisy585 ай бұрын

    Worked in middle schools mostly. Their victim attitudes and explosive denials and anger outbursts. Nothings their fault. They're never wrong.

  • @goddessk196
    @goddessk1965 ай бұрын

    I went to school with a guy who decapitated his mother. Literally shocked everyone that we went to school with he never was one of “those” kids literally got along with everyone but he has schizophrenia (of course we didn’t know as teens) and wasnt taking his medicine at the time he killed his mom. 😢 super sad

  • @josequins9099

    @josequins9099

    5 ай бұрын

    That's tragic. That poor kid would have to live with what he had done while off his meds.

  • @goddessk196

    @goddessk196

    5 ай бұрын

    @@josequins9099 yeah it’s awful and his younger sisters were there and saw the whole thing 😢

  • @thesnek7036
    @thesnek70365 ай бұрын

    Jesus, story 4 got me good

  • @Brotherkiller17
    @Brotherkiller1728 күн бұрын

    I had a really shitty childhood, but I thought I was fine. Hearing these stories makes me think I should see a therapist soon.

  • @skittslol1407
    @skittslol14075 ай бұрын

    If they parents suck, kid is in danger :(

  • @MetalJuggalo
    @MetalJuggalo4 ай бұрын

    At the beginning of my high school freshman year, there was this one kid in my gym class who was clearly not mentally stable whatsoever. The littlest things would set him off and he would often talk back to the teachers about the littlest things he didn't like about their class. That's not the worst of it. One day before we went outside to run the mile I was getting a drink of water from the fountain. This kid happened to be standing very close behind me. Didn't notice him and accidentally bumped into him. I quickly apologize and tried to laugh it off but the moment I turned around I saw this kid right in my face with quite possibly the angriest look on his face that I've ever seen. He quickly threw me out of the way into the wall. About a week later, I heard stuff about him supposedly throwing a teacher into the desk. The teacher told him to go to the office to get a tardy slip because he was like 2 minutes late. Of course he wasn't having that so he threw himself into her and knocked her into a desk, causing her to slam her head on it. To make matters worse this was a fairly old teacher, like 65 I think. Eventually he was sent to the principal so that the principal could deal with it. And just like you could probably guess, he shoved her as well. I don't know if anything too serious came from that, but sure as hell he was expelled. Definitely gonna see him on the news in the future.

  • @schrodingerskatze4308
    @schrodingerskatze43085 ай бұрын

    Wow. Most of those kids should have either been taken away from their parents or at least whatever form of youth welfare service exists should have been there to support the parents and help them do better parenting. Or maybe therapy would have been the way to go. It's shocking to hear of cases where absolutely nothing happened when their home clearly wasn't good for them. Although those stories could also all be made up, so I don't know.

  • @samuelhaverghast2442
    @samuelhaverghast2442Ай бұрын

    Pretty sure my teachers thought i would be in jail one day, I was THAT kind of kid, but while unaliving someone would decrease the surplus population, they aren't worth the hassle it would be

  • @bondsan
    @bondsan5 ай бұрын

    This is what happens when children are abused at home.

  • @lydianelson7737
    @lydianelson77375 ай бұрын

    8:43 Giving porn to minors is a felony, that mom should be in jail.

  • @Xeroph-5
    @Xeroph-54 ай бұрын

    I was pretty similar to the commenter in the last story when I was younger. I always hung around those kinds of people, I'm not even sure why. In about Year 6 (aged 10-11), I started hanging out with a few other quiet people, we had a lot of fun in our little corner of the playground in our last year of primary school. But MAN, am I happy I got out of dodge. My childhood "Best friend" (We'll call him D) apparently burned down his apartment later in high school, and another kid I was friends with is serving time for drug charges. D's telltale sign was that in Reception (age 4-5) he dislocated my goddamn shoulder. The teachers did fuck all about it, and I still haven't forgoven them for that, but I can't believe I stuck around D for another 5 years after that....

  • @AzzyForeman-ee7xq
    @AzzyForeman-ee7xq5 ай бұрын

    Hey great vid.

  • @anjachan
    @anjachan5 ай бұрын

    yeah, friends can be a bigger influence than parents.

  • @yasininn76
    @yasininn765 ай бұрын

    Remember, it's 99% the parent's fault and 1% actual mental issues. Even a person with severe mental issues can turn out acceptably fine with the right care from the start

  • @jesusbernal9025

    @jesusbernal9025

    5 ай бұрын

    You,re ABSOLUTELLY 100% right. My parents were elementary teachers in Mexico and that situation gave me the opportunity to observe that pattern. I,ve known many ,many people (friends, family, etc) and the most common issue that I,d noticed is the parents lack of patience, parental skills, emotional intelligence, not enough time/money. Etc One of those cases was my nephew Max; Hyperactive, very intelligent since birth, rejected from kindergarten and every school, and the prospects for a positive future were null. Fortunately for everybody my sister never gave up loving him, having all the patience and understanding, going to classes with him, being his guardian, and a long etc. Today he is a handsome,smart, free thinker,college student with exelent grades etc. But the most remarkable thing is his love for his mother, grand mother and the whole family.

  • @iluvyurbles

    @iluvyurbles

    4 ай бұрын

    Disagree on that Honestly some kids are just that messed up because how their brains are wired and no amount of money or good parenting will change that

  • @GiordanDiodato

    @GiordanDiodato

    4 ай бұрын

    I'd say more like 95% parents, 2% mental issues, 3% peer pressure.

  • @WomanRoaring

    @WomanRoaring

    Ай бұрын

    hmm. my grandparents had 10 kids. 1 of my uncles is just messed up. he made terrible choices. he has a very high IQ but because he realized how smart he was he didn't put effort into his life. he demanded things from people, he didn't want to work but expected to just be given like a CEO type job with high pay so he could just boss people around. he ended up doing drugs, going to jail on and off and is homeless and in his 70s now. the rest of the kids all had jobs and did something with their lives, he's totally wasted his. the oldest uncle became a judge and owned some truck stops, the girls all had families, not all the boys had kids but like the oldest, they all worked and supported themselves and were happy with their lives. they all tried to help my uncle, even my dad who was the closest to him in age and just friendship. this uncle lived with us for a while and omg it was horrible. my grandparents weren't perfect but they raised the rest of the kids and the rest didn't have issues like this uncle. one of my uncles even had schizophrenia and my grandma found a state that had a program to help him, so he had a job and lived in an apartment in a building that had nursing staff who made sure he took his meds every day. they would organize vacations for them, he travelled the world (he was a janitor for an airline, so he got free tickets) all with a sever mental illness. so i don't think it's 99% of my grandparents fault. that 1 uncle, all his choices. - now there are kids who are in horrible situations at home, grow up around drugs, violence and such and turn out to live the same lives but not all do.

  • @shinystarmiestudios4179
    @shinystarmiestudios41794 ай бұрын

    Story 4 is about Voldemort. Though I'm sure someone has already mentioned that.

  • @derpy433
    @derpy4335 ай бұрын

    You're my favourite narrator

  • @WomanRoaring
    @WomanRoaringАй бұрын

    When I was in high school i checked my car keys during a dance, I didn't have pockets and I didn't want to hold them all night, they lost them. The car at the time was over 10 years old and where you put the key in had a metal pice on top and bottom and the key fit in between. Well that was broken so if the steering wheel wasn't locked you could just turn the ignition using the metal pieces, no key. So I was talking to my French teacher and I mentioned I could get my car started if I could just get into it. She said, knowing you I'm not surprised. I was so offended! I'm sure her and a few other teachers thought I was the kid who would end up in jail. I don't know why but a lot of teachers thought of me as a bit thuggish. I wasn't, I was picked on and didn't take crap from people so I did get into a few fights but I never started them. I only hit back, I didn't hit first and that was after trying to get away from people. Anyway, I didn't turn out to be the bag kid even though I know thats what some teachers thought of me. My home life did suck but I wanted something different out of life and was working towards that. I saw my home life as what I didn't want, not the goal.

  • @drswag0076
    @drswag00765 ай бұрын

    the kid from story 7 had and took the chance to seek help. i too hope he's better now.

  • @bloodredrubyrose8740
    @bloodredrubyrose87405 ай бұрын

    As soon as a heard tom the orphan I knew it was going to be tom riddle lol

  • @MHShah17
    @MHShah175 ай бұрын

    4, I was having suspission when the name tom and the descriptions fit voldemort (Tom Marvolo riddle)

  • @lemaroccan
    @lemaroccan5 ай бұрын

    4:50 a less serious case but in primary (elamentary) this kid would bully people infront of teachers and the teachers would pretend not to notice and when someone told a teacher the teacher would say either 'why didnt you tell me when it happened' or 'he has adhd dont be so hard on him' which led him to be spoilt and ruin the shcool chromebooks by punching them. Again no punishment really. I hope his secondary teacher are disciplining him now so he doesnt end up on the news

  • @inviso87
    @inviso875 ай бұрын

    Told a freshmen kid that if he didn't watch himself, he was gonna end up on the wrong side of a court room for some kind of assault (likely sexual). He laughed as did his female friends that were with him at the time b/c I was the jokester teacher who had little to no filter and they thought I was just joking. Truth be told, I was trying to convey to him to be mindful of how he was interacting with females b/c I genuinely didn't how he interacted with them but tried to do so in a light manner. 3 years later, during his senior year, he was no longer allowed in school b/c, you guessed it, numerous sexual assault accusations came to light and the school decided to put him on Home Instruction while the investigations took place. The group of girls he was with freshmen year came running to me like "DID YOU HEAR!?!?! YOU WERE RIGHT. YOU WERE ACTUALLY RIGHT!!!" This year, I have another student I am quite concerned about. I know one of the students friends and asked their honest opinion on this dude and after chatting with her, she admitted that her mom doesn't like this kid in particular either and warned her to keep him at arms length b/c her mom said something feels off about the guy, which closely mirrors what I said about him. He doesn't seem like some awful terrible person, but I feel like it may be a ticking time bomb that just needs a catalyst in order to get that timer going. Hoping as well that it's just an unintentional bad vibe from not fully mastering proper social interactions but yeah. You can tell a lot by how much/little someone interacts with someone on a physical level. Even something playful like lightly grabbing someone's arm to get their attention can have so many meanings to it. And while it sounds goofy, someone's eyes can also tell you a lot about them. Also, had 2 kids a few years ago as well, brothers, who ended up murdering someone. The one had graduated already but the other was supposed to be entering his senior year of high school. They were goof balls but murder was never on the table for either of them. I'm right pretty often on reading people but these 2 I missed. For what it's worth, nobody saw it coming and there was, allegedly, extenuating circumstances that led to the murder. On a normal day, it never would have happened. As such, no signs there.

  • @mirazath
    @mirazath2 ай бұрын

    im not a teacher, but i went to school with a kid who in grade 1 SAd another student and got expelled, he was in the juvie prison by grade 5, and i lost track of him but yeah

  • @AdelTheForsaken
    @AdelTheForsaken5 ай бұрын

    8:14 it's not a bug it's a feature. It's easier to take advantage of destitute, desperate people.

  • @hi-te7gr
    @hi-te7gr5 ай бұрын

    i have a story, not as a teacher, but as a student in the same grade as this kid i’ll talk about. so, there is this one kid in my p.e. class, lets call him M. he’s never struck me as a really bad person, but just the kind of kid who thinks he’s amazing and above everyone else. obviously very annoying and treated others shitty, unless they’re his friends. recently, he apparently got OSS (out of school suspension) for threatening to shoot up the school. and also that about 10 kids put forward complaints about him. i heard this from kids in my science class who are friends with him, so the truth may not be 100% and stuff y'know. anyway, M hadn't been at school for half the week before winter break, so he probably did get OSS. for me, i feel like they should’ve had a bigger punishment and should take this way more seriously. this is still in middle school. it freaked me out thinking he can come to school at anytime and do horrible things, since he’s still enrolled and stuff, and can still ride the bus.

  • @kadeng6528
    @kadeng65282 ай бұрын

    There's a little boy that's the same grade as my little brother they got put in the same class in kindergarten and first grade and he's just mean. If my brother does well in p-e then it's because he's cheating not because he's good at it. There was one time this kid punched my brother multiple times because he bumped into him while getting in line after recess. I've heard from multiple people that when he shows up at the park all the kids leave because he's just mean. I will not be surprised if he does something awful as an adult.

  • @animetalk8132
    @animetalk81325 ай бұрын

    story 17 I thought the ending was going to be like he turned his life around nope. atleast in the last story it was a happy ending thanks jack hope you fix the late uploads. and sleep schedule in 2024

  • @hadesa.739
    @hadesa.7394 ай бұрын

    I throught Story 4 sounded a bit like Tom Riddle from Harry Potter and was like wow Horcruxes are real? 😂 And the guy's name is also Tom what a coincidence that is.

  • @adhrit-innovativebrains4240
    @adhrit-innovativebrains42404 ай бұрын

    2:15 story is very reminiscent of lord voldemort

  • @YujiSeo
    @YujiSeo5 ай бұрын

    I had one teacher who genuinely thought i would end up as a criminal, one day, because i was generally a troubled child. All that happened is that i grew up as a failure, not a criminal. Both my brothers lead much better lives than me, oldest lives a life I want to live which is.. traveling the world and getting to live outside the US, my second oldest brother just lives a normal, average life, nothing special but still better than mine. I live in a slum, in a dump of a house that I don't own, surrounded by cats I don't own. My partner and I live with his mum. His mum is severely mentally ill and doesn't realize it, she hoards junk to hell and back and hoards animals. Even started forcing us to take in strays as well. I would move out with my partner, but I have no job, I've been trying to find a job for 8 years only to be denied over and over as well as being discriminated against so.. I just.. can't win. Which, by the way, the teacher in question also believed I was "Too retarded" to pass 1st grade but I ended up being a straight A student from 4th grade all the way to 10th grade. I finished all required classes 2 years ahead of time and had nothing to do in school for my last two years. I was even offered an early graduation in 10th grade but I denied it because I wanted to stay with my friends. Once I graduated, I mentioned to my mum that I wanted to become a Scientist and she shot that down so quickly, saying that I was "Too stupid" to be a scientist which hurt me so much that I gave up on that dream.

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    5 ай бұрын

    It’s never too late. You’re obviously capable enough. In fact, you’re probably too capable- you’re smarter than your skill set. (Making a bright person do data entry will kill them). Get your tush into some online science classes. You have time and an internet connection. Even if you just get one college credit here or there, it will do you good. If you haven’t worked, find an employment centre and get vocational testing- so that you can be properly employed. I’m medically disabled, and even on days when I feel okay, it can be overwhelming to get going. It can seem so damned MUCH. I know how much easier it is to say than to do. But you can do it. Little, tiny, things can help. And they build on each other.

  • @YujiSeo

    @YujiSeo

    5 ай бұрын

    @@karenneill9109 To be honest, I DO want to but I also know I can't right now. I live in a stressful, terrible living environment and I would not be able to focus nor stick around if I were to try online college right now and, sadly, there isn't an employment center nearby, I'd have to go out of town to do that and I don't have a car, my partner's mum total'd ours. I want to get out of here first.

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    5 ай бұрын

    @@YujiSeo That sounds like a plan. It’s very hard to do anything in a stressful environment. Good luck with it, I hope you can find a better place to live.

  • @TheKenchanx
    @TheKenchanx5 ай бұрын

    OH WOW! How did I realize that story was about Voldemort, even before Horcruxes got mentioned?!

  • @JWS_1

    @JWS_1

    5 ай бұрын

    You're not the only one. As soon as I heard the first two sentences I knew exactly what it was about.

  • @CharlietheWarlock
    @CharlietheWarlock22 күн бұрын

    Damn that harry potter one got me😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @RealWonderTweek
    @RealWonderTweek2 ай бұрын

    The one with the kid who makes other kids cry - it’s must likely @bus3. It’s most likely how he believes his parents show there love. I used to be just like that kid cuz thats how i thought people showed love (used to hit me - and would hit each other)