13-year-old dies by suicide after bullying – family says cries for help were dismissed as “seeking attention”

The loss of 13-year-old Josiah Michael Dwinell has left a family — and a wider community — grappling with grief, questions, and a painful sense that more could have been done.

Josiah had just celebrated his 13th birthday on March 4. Eight days later, his life ended in a way that has shaken everyone who knew him. For his family, the timeline is not just tragic — it is impossible to separate from the warnings they say came before it.

According to relatives, concerns about bullying and Josiah’s mental health had been raised repeatedly in the months leading up to his death. His aunt, Shaena Stebbins, described a young boy who was struggling in ways that were visible at home, even if they were not always acknowledged elsewhere.

“He was being bullied at school and on the bus… not one person outside his home tried to help him,”

she wrote.

Josiah’s life had already been shaped by loss. His biological mother passed away more than five years ago, and he had since been living with his grandmother — someone he was deeply close to. Family members say she was a constant presence, trying to support him through increasingly difficult moments.

There were hospital visits. Conversations about his mental state. Attempts to seek help.

But according to his family, those efforts were not always taken seriously.

“His Mimi sat by his side… trying to get him the help he was seeking, and his mental health was overlooked,”

Stebbins shared.

Instead, they say, some concerns were dismissed — interpreted as attention-seeking rather than distress.

That distinction, in situations like this, can be critical.

Because what may appear outwardly as behavior can often be a signal — one that requires attention, patience, and intervention.

For Josiah, his family believes the weight of ongoing bullying became too much to carry.

“My nephew decided after a bus ride home that he couldn’t handle the bullying anymore.”

It is a sentence that reflects both heartbreak and a larger question: how many warning signs are needed before action follows?

In the days since his death, loved ones have spoken not only about how he struggled, but about who he was beyond those struggles. They describe a boy who brought light into their lives — a presence that cannot be replaced.

“He was an amazing brother, son, nephew… Josiah brought light and joy to our lives,”

his family wrote while organizing support to help cover medical and funeral expenses.

Grief in cases like this rarely stays contained within a single household. It extends outward — into schools, communities, and conversations about responsibility.

Bullying, particularly in school environments, is not a new issue. But each case brings renewed attention to how it is handled — or sometimes, not handled — by the systems meant to protect young people.

There is also a broader layer that often goes unspoken: how mental health concerns in children and teenagers are interpreted.

Expressions of distress can be subtle or misunderstood. They may not always fit expectations. And when they are dismissed, even unintentionally, the consequences can be profound.

At the same time, it is important to approach stories like Josiah’s with care.

There are rarely single causes in tragedies of this nature. Bullying, mental health struggles, personal history, and support systems all intersect in complex ways. Identifying those intersections is not about assigning blame in a single direction — it is about understanding where intervention might have changed the outcome.

What remains, above all, is a sense of loss.

A life that had just entered its teenage years. A family now navigating absence instead of presence. Questions that may never fully resolve.

And a reminder — difficult, but necessary — that when concerns are raised, especially repeatedly, they carry weight.

For those reading this, there is also a quieter message beneath the tragedy.

Pay attention.

Take concerns seriously, even when they seem small or uncertain. Listen without immediately dismissing. And when someone — especially a child — is struggling, the response they receive can matter more than it seems in the moment.

If you or someone you know is struggling, reaching out can make a difference. In the United States, support is available through the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (call or text 988), as well as Crisis Text Line (text MHA to 741741). Immediate help is also available through emergency services if needed.

Because sometimes, the most important intervention is simply not overlooking what is right in front of us.

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