My 12-Year-Old Daughter Was Bullied So Badly She Hid in the School Bathroom — I Comforted Her in the Simplest Way, and It Helped Her Rebuild Her Life

At an age when most kids have tight friend groups and loud laughter filling their lunch breaks, she is often alone. She doesn’t have many friends, and last year the bullying at school became so severe that some days I discovered she was hiding in the bathroom during lunch—just to avoid the stares, the whispers, the cruel comments that linger long after the bell rings.

Little by little, her world grew smaller. After school, she didn’t run outside to play or invite friends over. Instead, she stayed close to me, quietly sitting nearby as I packed orders for my small craft shop on the Tedooo app. She didn’t say much. She just watched—but I could tell there was curiosity in her eyes, thoughts she wasn’t yet brave enough to speak aloud.

For weeks, I noticed my yarn slowly disappearing. She asked for very little, sometimes just quietly taking some back to her room. Whatever she was working on, she did in silence, as if afraid that saying it out loud might make the dream disappear. I didn’t ask. I let her have her own world.

Until last night.

She walked out of her room with a scarf wrapped around her neck. Not clumsy. Not careless. A real scarf—neatly finished, soft, beautifully balanced in color. She stood in front of me, a little nervous, and said softly,
“Mom… someday I want my own Tedooo shop. For kids like me—kids who create things instead of having lots of friends.”

I had to turn away. I didn’t want her to see me cry.


This child who eats lunch alone.
This child who hasn’t been invited to a birthday party in two years.
This child who once hid in a bathroom stall to escape cruelty…
had found her refuge in loops of yarn, careful stitches, and a gentle dream—to create something meaningful.

This morning at 6 a.m., her bedroom light was already on. She was sitting on her bed, practicing new stitches, her small hands working with intense focus. When I asked why she was up so early, she smiled and said,
“For my future customers.”


My beautiful, resilient girl is turning her loneliness into art.

That scarf isn’t just “good for a 12-year-old.”
It’s stunning—period. The tension is perfect. The color transitions are seamless. The fringe is finished with a level of care that feels truly professional. But more than anything, it’s proof that while other kids were busy excluding her, she was busy becoming extraordinary.

If you’re reading this, please leave her a few words of encouragement. She reads every single comment on my Tedooo posts. She studies what customers love, what they notice, what matters. Your words might be the first kindness she’s received from peers in months.


Show her that the craft community celebrates quiet, talented kids—the ones who create beauty while the world tries to dim their light.

Sometimes the best revenge against bullies isn’t fighting back.
It’s becoming so talented that one day, they’ll brag they knew you before you ever shined.

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My 12-Year-Old Daughter Was Bullied So Badly She Hid in the School Bathroom — I Comforted Her in the Simplest Way, and It Helped Her Rebuild Her Life
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