1

So I am not entirely sure if this is a sociopath or psychopath but I had a child that was creepily into my pregnancy for the first 7 months. He wanted to name her, talked to my belly, etc. Then one day it clicked that I would leave and he got really close to me and whispered, “When you come out, I’m going to kill you with a hammer. I hate you.”
I was shocked, so I took him with me to the office. The LSSP asked why he said that. He replied that, “It will take her away. I want it to die so she stays here.” He was on a lot of medication for his incredibly violent tendencies. He had tried to kill his sister before by pushing her in front of a bus. His mother kept him locked in his room at night because she had found him standing over her with a knife.
Edit: The child was a Male. 10 years old. His mother agreed to have him committed after he attempted to kill a police support dog using a pair of scissors. MHMR and CPS were both involved. I haven’t seen or heard from the family since I left the district. -@Katydid2335
2

I have seen students display all sorts of extreme behavior over the past 20 years, teaching teenagers in challenging schools.
The one kid that I was convinced was a psychopath, just quietly refused to do anything he didn’t want to do. I never saw him angry, and yet I did see him hit people and say awful things to them. He was always eerily calm. He was tiny and very cute but he used to manipulate people and watch chaos unfold with these huge unblinking puppy-dog eyes. It was like he was carrying out an experiment.
ANYWAY that was when he was about 14. He’s 19 now and serving a life sentence for a horrific gang murder. -@randidentressangle
3

I worked with a student who would fit this description. The stories of the things he did are extensive. One example is that he got up from his seat to throw something away. On his way back, he walked up behind a student who was distracted working on his assignment. Out of the blue, he pushed the working student’s head forward and into the desk. He gave him a bloody nose. There had been no previous altercation or source of friction between the two. His parents were divorced and his mother was too afraid of him to have him during the days she had custody. His father would move him frequently from school to school once his behavior got so bad that the school started the process to get him into psychiatric care. -@almostahermit
4

1st grader threatened to cut my head off with a pair of scissors because I told her she couldn’t put a mutilated dead body on her banner. -@Squirrelgirl25
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I have a million stories of students who say borderline sociopathic stuff, but the worst thing I’ve ever heard to date was:
“I can’t be trusted with knives. My mommy hides all knives in the house from me because I’ve tried to stab everything and everyone. I know if I stab an animal or a person too much they might die. This would mean I’d go to jail and I don’t think I could make it in jail. So I want to find a dead body and stab it over and over again. This way I know I won’t get in too much trouble cause the person was already dead.” -@itsbitsyspiders
6

Two twin 8th grade boys (literal fuckin lunatics) threw their dog across their living room and it landed on the edge of the table. They said it was “dead but still moving” and they buried it. Dude they buried a live fuckin dog. This was confirmed by neighbors and they’re now in the appropriate facilities. Messed up times a million. -@MyDixeeNormus (shout out to the screen name)
7

I had a student while I was doing my student teaching (8th grade). He was constantly in trouble, but during the times he WAS in class, he just stared off with the most vacant look in his eyes, it truly scared me. It was downright creepy.
One day he was up at the whiteboard writing some stuff (I think it was correcting sentences) with a bunch of other kids who were doing the same thing. I wasn’t watching the kids at the board, and all of a sudden I hear this blood curdling scream and look over – he had brought a hypodermic needle and had stabbed the girl next to him in the leg.
He had been holding it in his hand the entire time, just waiting for the opportunity to stick someone. It was, of course, terrible, but the girl turned out okay. The worst part, besides that, was how he laughed when security came to get him … Ugh, I’m shuddering now just thinking about it. -@DTownForever
8

A 5 year old kindergarten student started crying, he didn’t want to go in the classroom. His mother told him he had to go anyways, the kid stopped crying, took off his belt, and started whipping his mother. As a teacher, it was the first time I was completely speechless. -@kiramylordandmygod
9

His sister annoyed him so he killed her kitten in front of her.
Complete and utter lack of remorse. Just didn’t see animals as any different from toys. Violence towards animals during childhood is very common in serial killers. -@MerylSquirrel
10

Had a six year old the size of a nine year old pin a four year old to a wall, and at least looked like he was trying to feel her up. I walked up behind him and shouted,”What the hell do you think you are doing?”, and he immediately backed off and started stuttering trying to explain himself. He would say some fucked up shit, too. One time, he walked up to me, a six foot tall, bearded man, and said, basically,”Hey mama, let me suck on them titties.” Hated that kid. If you told him to do anything, he would intentionally do something to go against what he was told. His parents spoiled him rotten, and let him do whatever he wanted. He got away with anything, because a former teacher had inadvertently injured him, and his family, who are filthy rich, threatened to sue the dogshit out of the school. He basically had immunity from discipline at school, and parents that let him do whatever he wanted. He hated me, because I wouldn’t put up with his shit. I never hurt him, but I would put him in a hold so that he couldn’t move fairly often, because he would constantly sucker punch other, smaller kids, for just about any reason at all. Even if he just wanted the toy they were holding. Kid was a little sociopath, with parents that were rich enough that they enabled the behavior. -@Einteiler
11

This one happened just the other day and, obviously, I’m going to be anonymous about it to protect the child’s identity. Let’s call her Abby.
So, I’m driving a minibus of students home from a basketball practice when suddenly Abby starts screaming, “did that have peanuts in it!? I’m allergic to peanuts!” She begins hyperventilating and crying and actually makes me pull over so she can get off the bus and throw up. We’re about 15 minutes from the school and I’m literally having a panic attack.
So, I call the principal and ask what should I do? Do we have an Epi-pen on hand at the school, ect. She seems confused and puts Abby’s grandmother on, who tells me she wasn’t aware her granddaughter, who is claiming she can barely breath, HAD any allergies.
When we got back to the school I was about ready to faint and the principal brings out her registration paperwork to show me: no listed allergies. She isn’t allergic to anything, it was all an act. The hyperventilating, the crying, even the throwing up, was all for attention.-@Typofest
12

I taught a 15-year-old boy who was really creepy. He submitted a creative writing story that was rape fiction in which he graphically described how a white, blonde woman was being raped to corrupt the purity she feigns (which was quite scary as a white, blonde woman to read). When confronted by a vice-principal, he started ranting about how he hated all the girls in the class because they were all bitches (even though none listed had ever had an interaction with him, positive or negative). He then wrote me an apology letter where heaps of the lines were aggressively crossed out with :) drawn next to them. At last confrontation by a vice-principal, he got really aggressive, walked out and punched the school fence several times. Unfortunately, he wasn’t expelled. -@OptimalJellyfish4
13

One of my students (11 years old) pushed a huge Christmas tree over on an elderly man and another small child and laughed hysterically. His reasoning? “It’s already January third. Christmas is over.” -@dogislove99
14

Not a teacher, but at my kid’s daycare there was a bona fide sociopath in the making. This kid would inflict harm on others with a genuine smile on his face like he was “playing” but he was secretly enjoying it. Hitting, biting, punching, kicking, breaking toys, destroying artwork… but very secretive and carefully planned when teachers or parents weren’t looking. He was really intelligent and well-spoken for his age as well. Yeah, he was asked to leave after a few years and pretty much every parent there was relieved. -@TheWingedFoot
15
Anthony was 6. He had violent tendencies towards animals and other children, severe headaches and a teddy bear containing the ashes of his dead sister. -@OriginalBowl

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