Scout was shocked by Miss Maudie’s response. After hearing various rumors about Boo, she was positive that Boo was a mental person. Their accounts were all false, proving that Boo was judged without people “climbing” into his skin. The society automatically labeled him as wrong and sick just because his life was surrounded in mystery. In addition to the previous quote, another example that can be used to support the overarching theme is when Jem and Scout heard Atticus shoot Tim Johnson, the dog of Maycomb County. Before Atticus shot the dog, Calpurnia informs Atticus that Tim Johnson is acting odd and dangerous. Consequently, Mr. Tate decides to take initiative and make Atticus shoot the dog. Earlier on, Scout thinks, “Atticus was feeble: he was nearly fifty” (118). Clearly, Scout believed her father was weak and thought that Atticus wasn’t capable of many things compared to the parents of her peers at school. Throughout the chapter, Lee exposes more of Atticus’s past by describing the scene in which he kills the rabid dog without the use of his glasses. Scout’s initial opinion on her father changes during this part of the