A Facebook post meant to highlight a teacher’s supposed compassion for struggling students didn’t quite go as planned. One of her former students saw it and remembered a very different version of events.
The 22-year-old woman shared her painful story on Reddit, explaining how her eighth-grade teacher once humiliated her in front of peers while she was battling an eating disorder. When that same teacher went viral for championing student mental health, the former student decided to set the record straight in the comments.
And the fallout? Let’s just say it wasn’t pretty. Want to know how a viral post turned into a public reckoning? Let’s unpack this drama.
One woman’s painful memories of a teacher’s cruelty resurfaced when a viral post exposed her former educator’s hypocrisy, leading to a public callout















OP provided an update:


At 13, with a serious eating disorder and grappling with anxiety and depression, OP’s only lifeline should have been compassion, not humiliation. Instead, her teacher chose shaming over safety, threatening to revoke graduation and “privileges,” broadcasting OP’s condition to peers (not other staff), effectiveness of tough love: 0/10.
Years later, the same teacher adopts a social-media persona of caring advocate, prompting OP to not “cancel” but simply call out the hypocrisy. The contrast is tragicomic: the only thing Ms. S “saved” was her image.
Body and eating-related stigmatization does not motivate recovery, it deepens it. A systematic review in Frontiers in Psychiatry confirms that maintaining focus on weight and allowing weight stigma in treatment intensifies shame, internalized bias, and worsens mental health outcomes. That aligns with broader evidence: weight stigma is consistently linked to escalated disordered eating behaviors, including restraint, bingeing, and self-harm.
This case reflects a wider crisis: stigma itself can be more damaging than depression. A recent study found eating disorders are more socially stigmatized than depression, with damaging stereotypes, like “weakness” or “vanity”, deterring help-seeking. When it comes from a trusted adult, the damage is amplified.
OP did the right thing by speaking her truth in a public, but factual way. If genuine change were possible, Ms. S’s appropriate response would be: “I was wrong, and I’m sorry.”
What opens healing is accountability, not deflection. OP shouldn’t feel pressured to escalate permanently, this isn’t about revenge but about safeguarding others. If Ms. S is indeed in trouble now, let it be because her actions invited scrutiny, not because of vindiction.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
These Redditors condemned Mrs. S for gossiping about her anorexia to classmates




Some slammed Mrs. S’s defensive reaction, with one urging a public retort to highlight her bullying



This group cheered her for exposing the truth







This user shared a similar story of a teacher outing their self-harm, emphasizing the long-term harm





This one raw account of childhood neglect and teacher indifference underscored the betrayal of uncaring educators












What began as a Facebook post for validation ended as a harsh reminder that actions don’t fade just because years pass. For this former student, telling her truth wasn’t about “canceling” anyone, it was about refusing to let a hurtful past be whitewashed for likes and shares.
Do you think the student was right to speak up years later, or should the teacher have been given the benefit of assumed growth? And what would you have done in her place?










