At just five years old, Ryder Wells has endured more than most people face in a lifetime. While visiting family for Thanksgiving in 2015, the North Carolina toddler—only 21 months old at the time—was mauled by two 100-pound rottweilers. He survived catastrophic injuries: half of his face was torn away, his teeth were crushed, and he suffered a broken arm and a punctured lung. Doctors warned his family not to expect a miracle. Ryder proved them wrong.
Since then, this little fighter has undergone around 50 surgeries. What he hasn’t deserved are the reactions he still meets out in the world. His teaching assistant recalls adults staring when he first started school. His mom, Brittany, says trips to the park and grocery store can be brutal—children have pointed and called him a “monster,” and a stranger once sneered “ew” as they passed. “It breaks my heart,” she says, “that after everything he’s survived, people still aren’t kind about something he can’t control.”
Brittany, 31, from Granite Falls, worries about how classmates will treat her son as school life unfolds. Ryder sometimes hides beneath a cap, lowers his head, and relies on his glasses to shield himself. Every day, she reminds him that he is beautiful, that being different is beautiful, and that it’s okay to stand out. Nothing, she says, really stops him—his resilience is as clear as his smile.
Now she’s speaking up to raise awareness of how bullying and casual cruelty affect children with facial differences. Ryder’s survival is a testament to grit and excellent medical care; his daily challenges are a reminder that kindness matters just as much. Teaching kids not to single out those who look different—and modeling that compassion as adults—can help children like Ryder grow up with the dignity and joy they deserve.
If Ryder’s story moved you, let it guide your words and actions. Choose empathy. Celebrate differences. And, if you can, share this message so more people see the boy behind the scars—beautiful inside and out.