Why Different Isn’t Wrong

Why Different Isn’t Wrong

Why Different Isn’t Wrong

I’ve been called a lot of things growing up. Dumb. Stupid. Social butterfly. But the one that stuck with me the most was weird. That word followed me through school hallways, into classrooms, and even outside of school. Most of the time, people didn’t say it to hurt me. They just didn’t understand me. I saw the world differently, noticed things others didn’t, and asked questions that didn’t have simple answers. And I wasn’t trying to fit in. I just didn’t feel like I needed to.

For a long time, I thought being different meant something was wrong with me. I believed the labels. I thought maybe I really was all those things. But over time, I began to realize that the problem wasn’t me. People often label what they can’t understand. It helps them feel like they’ve figured something out. Like sorting clothes into piles when you don’t know where something belongs. It doesn’t mean the clothes are bad. It just means you’re not sure where they fit.

As I got closer to the families who use Schoolio, I started to see pieces of myself in the children they were teaching. I saw it in the kids who struggled to sit still. In the ones who asked more questions than most teachers had time to answer. In the learners who didn’t follow the same path as everyone else. These kids weren’t broken or difficult. They were just full of a different kind of energy. The kind that doesn’t always show up the way school expects it to.

And the parents who choose to homeschool these children are some of the bravest people I’ve met. They don’t take the easy path and don’t choose homeschooling because it’s convenient. Parents do it because they want their child to feel seen and because they believe there’s more than one way to learn. They do it because their child needs something different, and they’re willing to build it themselves.

I think about how far I’ve come. From the kid who didn’t fit in, to someone who gets to support other kids who feel the same way. It’s not about fixing them—it’s about walking alongside them. Being different isn’t something to hide; it’s a part of who they are. And most of all, it’s something to be proud of.

At Schoolio, we get to be a small part of that journey. We get to help children feel understood. And we get to remind parents that their choice to take the road less travelled matters. Because sometimes, that road leads to the most incredible places.

 

Sathish

still learning, still unlearning

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