Math class has long carried a reputation that precedes it, whispered through hallways and passed down like folklore from older students to younger ones. For many children, it becomes the subject most closely associated with anxiety, confusion, and the fear of being publicly wrong. Numbers, unlike stories or drawings, don’t bend easily to imagination, and the rules governing them can feel arbitrary to a young mind still learning how the world works. Teachers often present multiplication tables as immutable truths to be memorized rather than concepts to be explored, leaving little room for interpretation or curiosity. In this environment, students who think concretely and logically in their own way can find themselves at odds with expectations.
Little Johnny was one such student. He wasn’t lazy, and he wasn’t unintelligent. He listened carefully, answered honestly, and believed that understanding something meant recognizing its underlying logic rather than repeating it mechanically. To Johnny, math was supposed to make sense, not just sound correct. Unfortunately, classrooms don’t always reward that kind of thinking, especially when the goal is conformity rather than comprehension. His struggles weren’t born from ignorance but from a literal-minded approach that interpreted questions exactly as they were asked, without reading between the lines or guessing at what the teacher wanted to hear.