Christy Richardson’s son, “Bubba,” who has autism, was having one of those days when nothing could calm him. Overwhelmed and frustrated, he seemed unreachable. Knowing his love for police officers, Christy reached out for help, hoping someone might reach him where she couldn’t.
Deputy Corey Loftis arrived—not with orders or sternness, but with patience and warmth. Instead of talking down to Bubba, he dropped to the floor and started doing push-ups, inviting Bubba to join. Slowly, the tension in the room began to ease.
Christy shared the encounter on social media, never expecting it to reach beyond her friends. Within hours, the story went viral. Messages poured in from parents of children with autism, thanking Deputy Loftis for showing that compassion can live in uniform. One parent wrote: “This is the kind of officer my son dreams of meeting someday. Thank you for proving that kindness is strength.”
Deputy Loftis humbly brushed off the praise. “I didn’t do anything special,” he said. “I just treated Bubba like a person who needed a friend in that moment.” But to Christy, and to countless parents who watched, it was more than that—it was hope. Proof that even on the hardest days, there are people willing to kneel down, meet a child where they are, and turn fear into laughter. And for Bubba, it wasn’t just push-ups—it was the day he gained a hero and a friend.