In Spider-Man: No Way Home, Peter Parker’s world is turned upside down—not by a villain, but by exposure. His identity is revealed. He becomes instantly and globally recognized. Every part of his life is scrutinized, and everyone he cares about is affected. And then, the moment that hits hardest: Peter, MJ, and Ned are all rejected from MIT. Not because of grades. Not because of lack of effort. But because of who Peter is—and the chaos that now follows him.
For many viewers, this rejection was framed as a plot device. But for those of us who’ve experienced public fallout, shame, or reputation-based rejection, it cut a little deeper.
This isn’t just a superhero story—it’s a mental health story.
Imagine being a teenager already burdened by grief, guilt, and responsibility, and then watching the institutions you aspired to—schools, communities, society at large—shut their doors on you, not for what you did, but because of how they perceive you. That’s the reality Peter, MJ, and Ned face. And that’s a reality that many people know all too well.
Whether it’s stigma surrounding mental illness, past mistakes, family background, or being associated with someone controversial—we live in a world where perception can sometimes outweigh truth. People are denied opportunities, compassion, and even basic dignity because of what others believe about them. That creates an invisible trauma—one rooted in being seen, but not truly understood.
Peter’s mental health in the film is never formally addressed, but it’s everywhere: in the way he isolates himself, the way he spirals into desperation, the way he internalizes blame and decides to fix everything alone. He doesn’t ask for help. He doesn’t process the weight he’s carrying. And in the end, he chooses total disconnection. It’s heartbreaking—and, in some ways, deeply realistic.
When the world turns on you, even if only partially, even if only loudly but not unanimously, it’s easy to believe that you’re the problem. That you’re toxic. That the people you love would be better off without you. That you can only protect them by disappearing. That’s the lie trauma tells us. That’s the lie shame reinforces. And Peter believed it.
His decision to erase his existence from everyone’s memory isn’t framed as depression—but it echoes its core symptom: the feeling of being a burden. It’s a feeling many people experience when they’re struggling mentally. The idea that even your presence might harm others. That the solution is to quietly leave—no mess, no memory, just peace for everyone else.
But what if Peter had talked to someone? What if he had been given space to process what he was going through, not as Spider-Man, but as Peter Parker—a kid who lost his aunt, lost his future, and felt like he was losing everyone else too?
What if our world, like his, took mental health as seriously as it takes chaos?
No Way Home is powerful because it hides a mental health narrative beneath a superhero plot. It’s a reminder that people can be in crisis without showing the “right” signs. That being strong doesn’t mean you’re okay. That asking for help isn’t weakness—it’s survival.
For anyone who’s ever felt like Peter, know this: You are not a burden. You are not too complicated. You are not too damaged. You are not too loud or too controversial or too anything to be loved, helped, and healed.
You are human.
And you deserve support—whether or not you can shoot webs from your wrists.

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