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Onboarding - Welcome New Heros is happening in 30 hours
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Kicking off the 2026 HIW season
This past Friday, HIW had the honor of hosting our first assembly of the year at Redstone Middle School, setting the tone for another year of character development, leadership, and anti-bullying work with students. The energy in the room reminded us exactly why this work matters, kids leaning in, engaging, and being reminded that there truly is a hero in every kid. We were also grateful to have members of the Oklahoma Juvenile Affairs State Advisory Group (OJA SAG) in attendance, witnessing firsthand the impact of prevention-focused, youth-centered programming. It was especially meaningful to see SAG Chair, Les Thomas in his element championing youth, community, and collaboration. During the assembly, HIW was honored to receive a BIG grant check from the SAG, that was awarded this past fall, affirming the importance of early intervention, character development, and school-based prevention efforts across Oklahoma. We are deeply grateful for the partnership, the trust, and the shared commitment to supporting young people. Moments like this remind us that when schools, nonprofits, and state leaders come together, real impact happens. Here’s to a strong start to 2026 and the meaningful work ahead.
Kicking off the 2026 HIW season
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🛡️ Welcome, New Heroes 🛡️
We want to take a moment to celebrate and welcome the newest members of Heroes In Waiting. In the last week our small community has more than doubled!! Starting with the Jason's - because they are the Greatest... I'm not biased! @Jason Dobbie is a Former chef turned sober life coach. Helping you move beyond just staying sober and start living your best life. @Jason Strickland is a Poet. Builder of quiet momentum. I write about discipline, loss, creation, and the work done without applause. Founder, The Art of Poetry Community. Now for the Aussies - Daniel & Joshua: @Daniel Halls is a full time nursing manager but aims to sharpen your people skills without the fluff. Communication, conflict, leadership and more made simple @Joshua Bates is the Skool Mayor, Melbourne and focused on Sports club management in the Captains Circle 🔥 Providing real help for sports clubs: no BS tips, templates & systems to succeed on & off the field 🏟️ Someone say Computer Science (Noah, Kunmi & Khalid): @Noah Wolcott is a gaming code master looking to teach people computer languages without the expensive student loans.. Also Running for IRL mayor of Chatt🤔 @Kunmi Oduola is building AI agents that work across websites, Instagram DMs, Facebook Messenger, and SMS. These Agents help business owners or services providers in growing and help them in closing more deals @Khalid Jamil is a Khalid Jamil works as a Web Developer at Skoll. He manages the technical side of the website to ensure a smooth and reliable experience for all users. Personal Growth is happening here with Rich, Mel, Ellie: @Rich Guy is a Former self-proclaimed Fatso. Loosing over 120 Pounds! Proving weight loss can be Fun and Simple: Ask him about it! :)
🛡️ Welcome, New Heroes 🛡️
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Bullying and neurodiversity
With a lot of respect, I’d like to share something I posted today in my own community. I feel this space is also a good place for us to talk about this topic, and I hope it can be helpful. Bullying of neurodivergent people (autism, ADHD, dyslexia, among other conditions) is very common. Studies estimate that around 77–84% of autistic children experience bullying at some point, which makes it a very high risk factor. Neurodivergent individuals have a significantly higher risk of bullying, school harassment and victimisation, both in educational and workplace settings. They are often targeted with mockery, verbal harassment or social exclusion because of differences in communication, behaviour or sensory needs, which has a serious impact on their emotional development and sense of safety. This bullying often takes the form of verbal and physical harassment, isolation and exclusion, frequently based on differences in communication and sensory processing. The impact can be severe, including low self‑esteem, depression and anxiety. ______________________________________________ Bullying and neurodiversity: it’s not “just jokes”, it’s real harm 🧱​ When we talk about bullying, many people picture a couple of mean kids in the playground or an annoying colleague at work. For neurodivergent people, it’s almost never just that. Bullying shows up in classrooms, corridors, group chats, universities, offices, “informal” meetings and comments that hide behind the excuse of humour. And its impact is not just “I felt bad for a while”: it touches safety, health, and how a person sees themselves in the long term. Why are neurodivergent people such an easy target? It’s not because they are “weaker”. It’s because the context paints a target on their back. Some patterns that often show up: - Difference is visible. Communication style, eye contact, stimming, intense interests, hypersensitivity to noise or touch… all of that gets read as “weird”, “too much”, “not normal”. - Social rules are opaque and shifting. Many neurodivergent people don’t easily read unspoken rules, irony, or the mood changes of a group. Others read too much and over‑analyse every cue. In both cases, they become exposed in groups that value sameness. - Power goes unquestioned. When teachers, managers or families don’t understand neurodivergence, they may side with the aggressor (“you’re too sensitive”, “it wasn’t that bad”) or even be the ones who humiliate, expose or ridicule. - The environment is already hostile. Noise, lights, constant changes, lack of predictability. A nervous system that is already at its limit has very little margin to tolerate attacks, and very little energy to advocate for itself.
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🛡️ Weekly Encouragement — HIW Style
As we venture into another week of workdays with colleagues, clients, students, and strangers we haven’t met yet… Remember this: you don’t have to change the whole world — you just have to change the moment in front of you. This week, look for the “small hero” opportunities: - 👀 Notice who’s getting overlooked - 🤝 Include the one who’s on the edge - 🗣️ Say the brave sentence (even if it’s simple) - 🧠 Stay steady when emotions run hot - 🛡️ Be the safest person in the room on purpose You never know what someone is carrying into a Monday. Win or challenge question: What’s something you’re walking into this week — good, bad, or indifferent? 👇
🛡️ Weekly Encouragement — HIW Style
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Heroes In Waiting
skool.com/heroesinwaiting
Anti-Bullying + Mental Wellness Toolkit — Age Appropriate Material, Complete w/ 12 Short Lessons, Resources, and a Community Helping Every Kid Belong.
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