To begin with, please go read Kate Harding's excellent post on childhood bullying. A lot of it applies universally. The part about people being willing to say "but he/she's really a good kid" about bullies especially speaks to me, because I heard that when I was younger. I heard that a lot.
So here, full disclosure time: I was a weird kid. I was too smart for my classmates and too socially inept for my teachers. I was years behind in the areas of "giving things up," clinging to My Little Ponies and imaginary friends long past the point where it was "cool." My family was poor. I didn't have fashionable clothes or lunch sacks full of things to trade. I couldn't throw birthday parties, and when it was my turn to bring things to share with the class, they were always homemade—not the best way to look cool when the other students could afford fancy things from fancy bakeries. I liked books better than I liked boys. I watched cartoons. I sang in public. I wrote weird stories for class assignments. I came from a single-parent household. I stood out, no matter what I did, no matter how much I tried to be "normal." "Normal" wasn't in my skill set.
The kids I went to school with were exactly as understanding of all this concentrated weirdness as you'd expect them to be. They pushed me around, made fun of me, stole my homework; they ripped my books in half, shoved me into closets, knocked my lunches out of my hands. I can't stand the thought of getting a library card, because they stole my library books, leaving me with a fine my family's welfare-level budget couldn't pay. I was from a family so poor that ketchup really was considered a vegetable, and the little creeps I went to school with stole my library books. Not because I fought back, because I didn't. Not because I'd done anything to them, because I hadn't. Because they thought it was funny.
I listened to the adults when they told me it was my fault for being different. That if I just ignored the bullies, they'd go away and find an easier target. That if I was willing to change, to conform, that the bullies would be my friends, and not my tormentors. Why I would want to befriend people who once pushed me into traffic because, again, they thought it was funny...that part was never explained. I ate a lot of lunches in the office or the library. I got better about keeping my head down, about not crying where anyone could see me, and about answering "How was your day?" with the obligatory lie.
Fine. My day was fine. I had a lot of "fine" days back then. It's amazing how often "fine" meant "horrible, terrible, mortifying, humiliating, dehumanizing, brutal." All I ever had to say was "fine."
By the time I was fifteen, I had attempted suicide multiple times. Luckily for me, the Internet wasn't around to make it easier, and I had to rely on (often inaccurate) second-hand information. Right around the time I started to fully understand what it would take for me to kill myself, I started meeting people who understood what it was like to be different, who didn't make fun of me for being myself. It helped that my high school was across the street from a junior college, giving me easy access to a whole new social circle. There are times when I honestly believe that if I'd gone to a different school, I wouldn't have survived to graduate.
In a way, I was one of the lucky ones. I was a member of my school's dominant racial group. It was a college prep school, and most of the students were too focused on scholarships and golden tickets to make hounding me their life's goal—I was a hobby, not a vocation. I was rarely the target of violence. When I came out of the closet, I got some additional mockery, but not much; not enough to truly make things worse than they already were. My life could have been much, much harder...and I say that as someone who literally developed stress headaches and ulcers by the age of seventeen, from the strain of coping with the bullying.
It didn't help that for decades—and I do mean decades—I blamed myself. There had to be something inherently wrong with me, right? Otherwise, the bullies would leave me alone. Especially since so many of the bullies had friends, had favorite teachers, were golden children who could do no wrong. I was convinced that I was somehow flawed, and that I was just too stupid to see it. It was the only explanation that made sense.
Only it turns out that there's no explanation. Some bullies come from broken homes, or have low self-esteem, or need to prove themselves on the pecking order. Others...don't. Some bullies are wealthy, smart, attractive, and have everything in the world going for them. Some bullies do it because they can. Oh, I'm sure that every bully has a root cause, but at the end of the day, you bully, or you don't. One choice is right, one choice is wrong. And way too many people make the wrong choice, because it's easy, because it gives them power, because it's fun to kick the people that nobody will defend. Most bullies seem to learn early that their victims have been trained to "be the bigger person" and "turn the other cheek." You know what? Ignoring a bully just makes it more fun to torment you, because then, if they get you to react, they know they've won.
We've known for a long time that school bullying was out of control, but every time it gets "uncovered" again, people react like it's some sort of shock. Kids can be mean? HORRORS! Kids bully other kids? HORRORS!
Bullshit.
Everyone at my high school knew that bullying happened. If you were a bully, you knew. If you were bullied, you knew. If you were neither of the above, you tried not to align yourself too closely with the bullied, because there was a chance the big red target we all had painted on our backs might rub off. No one in the American school system is ignorant of bullying. But still, we take the word of the bullies over the word of the bullied. Still, we allow for the mistreatment and marginalization of anyone labeled "different."
And still, kids are dying over it.
This whole situation hurts my heart. Please, please, speak out against bullying. Break the cycle. Humanity will always have the potential to be cruel, but isn't the world already difficult enough? No one should die for the crime of being different. No one should learn the lessons so many of us were forced to learn.
No one else should die because we didn't stand up and say "enough" to the bullies of the world. The fact that I have to write "no one else," and not "no one," just shows how bad the situation has become.
Please. Break the cycle, before it's too late for someone else.
Please.
← Ctrl ← Alt
Ctrl → Alt →
October 13 2010, 22:09:09 UTC 6 years ago
For me, it finally stopped in High School when I'd taken a couple of years worth of martial arts and had gained the courage and self-confidence to stand up to the bullies who tried to push me around. I still remember fondly when one of them tried to order me out of my seat on the bus and I gave them a very confident "No." Watching them look puzzled that I hadn't given in and wander off muttering "no?" in a confused tone was quite enjoyable. That was the point where I realized that I could actually stand up for myself, and the world wouldn't end because of it.
I hope I can help my kid with this when he gets old enough - I know that my parents were supportive when they found out, but I also remember that I didn't tell them most of the things that happened to me. I hope I can figure out how to encourage my son to be willing to talk about these things. I guess we'll see - there'll be quite some time yet before that becomes an issue.
October 14 2010, 01:46:09 UTC 6 years ago
October 13 2010, 22:12:12 UTC 6 years ago
I was bullied too. I was held down on the playground for all of recess. Sat on my this girl. I remember her name. I was teased mercilessly by students, and worse, by one teacher. None of the teachers ever did anything to help. I remember fantasizing about bringing a knife to school to slash the teacher's tires on his car. I didn't of course, but I understand when students turn violent. It took me years to get over grade 7 and 8. High school was bad, but I could go about my own business without actual fear. It got better for me, and I feel lucky. It shouldn't be luck.
When I heard about the most recent cases, my heart just sank for their suffering. To know they felt they had no way out, and they probably didn't. Why didn't anyone help, and why do people want to make others suffer. I can't wrap my head around that. People told me to toughen up, to get a thicker skin, but I refuse, because I don't want to be like them.
October 14 2010, 01:46:34 UTC 6 years ago
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 22:17:29 UTC 6 years ago
I have bullying stories too, but I wanted to observe a few things. First, bullying (no, no, damnit, it's physical, emotional, psychological *abuse* - deliberate harm *repeatedly* done) leaves scars. The scars can be deep and nearly invisible, only to flare up when someone says or does something that touches a nerve, or so close to the surface that the only sane alternative is withdrawal from anything that *might* trigger you.
Second, whatever the degree of abuse might have been, it is still abuse. I'm lucky in that nobody destroyed my possessions. I'm not lucky because I was still abused.
We share our memories and hurts as a form of empathy -- "See, I went through this too, I understand." So this is where I say, "Yes, I went through this too, I do understand, and thank you *all* for sharing this out in public."
October 14 2010, 01:46:50 UTC 6 years ago
And you're welcome.
Comment part 1
October 13 2010, 22:19:00 UTC 6 years ago
"Normal" wasn't in my skill set.
*Still* isn't in mine. I survived my own bullying by shutting out reality for ten years. Did such a good job of it that 1. I have almost no memories from childhood. 2. I've been left barely functional for the world: no people skills, no patience, still oversensitive, very low tolerance for stupidity, I find directions hard to follow, and even when I give 110% at a job - even when I'm doing well at a job - I end up getting complaints anyway and end up fired. The only two exceptions were when I had a boss who thought I was doing a good enough job otherwise that they overlooked (or helped me compensate for) my deficiencies.
So yup, one of the results of the bullying for me was the inability to hold down a steady job without pity from my boss. Luckily, I'm now on disability for my myriad psychological issues. And now trying to adjust to the reality of no longer needing a job.
I'm surprised I didn't get bullied more than I did, in fact. I've always been androgynous, and not just physically. Made no distinction as a child between things meant for boys and things meant for girls. In retrospect, I think I got bullied mainly because my bullies (all of whom were boys) were attracted to me and not at all happy about it. I also retained imaginary friends until 8th grade. After that, I still got lost in fantasy, even if it was just after school, for a long time. As late as my senior year in high school, I was still playing pretend with my younger sister in our back yard, and sometimes by myself. By that point, I no longer fully interacted, just spoke silently with the imaginary personages. Truth be told, I never actually lost that ability... and it could be due in part to the fact that I'm a multiple. Other aspects of my personality, other people altogether, imaginary or not, I have at least 8 other people living in my head with me, fully aware of each other and the outside world, fully sentient. And on top of that, I can still talk with the characters I come up with for stories, and even become them to a degree. I call it shapeshifting; my body feels different when I shapeshift into other forms. If I shapeshift into certain kinds of robots, I can no longer feel my mouth (but can still control it). So yeah... I'm still an avatar of eccentricity.
I was from a family so poor that ketchup really was considered a vegetable, and the little creeps I went to school with stole my library books. Not because I fought back, because I didn't. Not because I'd done anything to them, because I hadn't. Because they thought it was funny.
O_O Holy shit. Most my bullies ever did concerning books was remove my bookmarks or steal my books for a few minutes at a time. They never kept anything they stole.
My family wasn't quite that poor; Dad never went to college because he was too busy working whatever jobs he could find to survive (HIS family would have been in the "ketchup is a vegetable" category), but whatever his main job of the time, he has a second job doing freelance writing. Mom has a master's degree and has usually been an art teacher through the years, though for a time she worked with mentally handicapped people, and another time she was a teacher's aid in the special education class.
But man, yeah. Stealing library books and not returning them to the library, making you pay the fine. IT'S A CRIME! >:-(
That if I just ignored the bullies, they'd go away and find an easier target.
Which is, of course, a load of crap. I changed tactics in junior high because I was losing the ability to get lost in fantasy, switched to staring off into space with a blank, expressionless look on my face, not reacting to the bullying. They didn't stop. They took it as a challenge and stepped up the bullying. It just kept getting worse.
That if I was willing to change, to conform, that the bullies would be my friends, and not my tormentors.
In essence selling your soul to the devil.
Re: Comment part 1
October 15 2010, 16:02:23 UTC 6 years ago
Re: Comment part 1
6 years ago
Re: Comment part 1
6 years ago
Re: Comment part 1
6 years ago
Comment part 2
October 13 2010, 22:20:04 UTC 6 years ago
O_O
Man, I'm lucky. I mostly avoided physical bullying.
Fine. My day was fine. I had a lot of "fine" days back then. It's amazing how often "fine" meant "horrible, terrible, mortifying, humiliating, dehumanizing, brutal." All I ever had to say was "fine."
Fine = Fucked-up, Insecure, Neutoic, and Emotional. :-| I still answer "fine" out of habit.
By the time I was fifteen, I had attempted suicide multiple times. Luckily for me, the Internet wasn't around to make it easier, and I had to rely on (often inaccurate) second-hand information. Right around the time I started to fully understand what it would take for me to kill myself, I started meeting people who understood what it was like to be different, who didn't make fun of me for being myself.
I never attempted suicide, because I was too afraid to actually do it. But man, I wanted to die. I wanted the suffering to end, and didn't have the nerve to even attempt to end it myself. Besides, I'd so blocked out reality that I doubt I'd have had any clue what to do aside from jumping off a building, and my crippling fear of heights prevented that possibility for me. If I'd known then some of what I know now, I might have attempted to drown myself, since I can't swim.
Luckily for me, from around age 8 to age 10 or 11, I had my best friend (and only friend) Justin Reed to get me through things. He was weird, too. After we moved away, I was really depressed, but still managed to seek out other weird kids and befriend them. Had the good fortune to live across the street from one of them, and her equally weird little sister (great playmate for my own little sister). The older one's weirdness was mostly her looks; she was not conventionally pretty, in fact I think I was the only one who thought she was pretty at all, but that's one of my many weirdnesses.
Anyway, I also sought out fellow freaks, and freak-friendly normies, in high school. Most of the friendlies thoughout my school career were girls; almost none of the boys who weren't freaks themselves wanted anything to do with me.
When I came out of the closet, I got some additional mockery, but not much; not enough to truly make things worse than they already were.
I was unwillingly outed as bi and trans in high school when somebody somehow found my website. How they found it, I still don't know, as my real name wasn't on it. How they knew it was me is another mystery. I never worked on it when anyone else was around, and cleared the history and cache. So, mystery. Oh yeah, and did I mention I was already deep into my Traipah stuff? Also, while I didn't know the term "Otherkin" yet, it was somewhat clear from my site that I didn't feel quite human.
After that site was found, the bullying turned into sexual harassment. Harassment that lasted for years. They also noticed my sister and I were close, which they thought was weird given we're 10 years apart in age, and spread a nasty rumor that the relationship was of an inappropriate nature. I hope they all die painfully and slowly, from something that causes severe facial disfigurement. Actually, I can't decide between that one and "May they have a long life in interesting times and attract the attention of important personages." :-D
Re: Comment part 2
October 15 2010, 16:02:48 UTC 6 years ago
Re: Comment part 2
6 years ago
Re: Comment part 2
6 years ago
Comment part 3 of 3
October 13 2010, 22:20:52 UTC 6 years ago
I was lucky there. I never blamed myself. For the first 10 years, none of it was real to me; I was the hero of some movie, anything that happened to me was just in the script, and I'd alway bravely make it through, save the world and rescue the handsome and kind prince, or whatever. My fantasy world was real to me, and reality was just the figment.
Even when some internal force evicted me from La-La Land (I could visit, but no longer hold residence there), I retained such a powerful ego that I was able to blame everything BUT me. I was a dichotomy, because part of me was meek and timid and scared and that was the part of me that had gone into hiding for so long. Then came along this strong part with a towering ego and an intense hatred for anything or anyone that would dare attack me. In retrospect, it was one of the other people in my head, Alexander Antonin. Alex has an ego that would make Dr. Rodney McKay of Stargate Atlantis look humble by comparison. When my primary defense mechanism began to crumble, Alex stepped in to take its place.
Most bullies seem to learn early that their victims have been trained to "be the bigger person" and "turn the other cheek." You know what? Ignoring a bully just makes it more fun to torment you, because then, if they get you to react, they know they've won.
This is probably why Alex turned to LaVeyan Satanism. One of the main philosophies of the Church of Satan is "Do unto others as they do unto you" and "If a man strikes you on one cheek, SMASH him on the other." Alex's main gripe, to this day, is that he shares a body with someone who is just naturally nonviolent. I was not raised Christian, never was taught the turn the other cheek stuff, probably would have ignored it completely and forgotten all about it in 5 minutes if I had. It's just not in my nature to be violent, even with words. And it always annoys Alex when he wants to say something and I don't let him.
Poor Alex, a Left Hand Path traveler stuck in the same body with someone who thinks Gandhi and MLK Jr. had the right idea. :-)
Ah, but we get along for the most part. Alex is kind, loving, and forgiving of friends. He is also extremely loyal. But cross him and the only thing protecting you from him would be me, Tristan.
Still, we allow for the mistreatment and marginalization of anyone labeled "different."
And still, we allow it to continue even though in the adult world it would be a crime; harassment at best, assault at worst.
I think if I ever have a kid, and they get bullied, I'll try the following:
1. Tell them that the only thing bullies understand is violence. Treat them like they treat you, because you can't expect turning the other cheek to work. Don't start any fights, but you be sure to finish them.
2. Help my child to press charges of either harassment, assault, or both where applicable. Maybe jailtime will teach the little bastards to quit.
3. Tell the kid that it's possible no one really knows how to deal with bullies, whether they've lived with bullying or not. So to do your best to survive, try not to let them win, and ask for help now and then.
4. I'd also tell them about the one time (and only one time) that I turned a bully into a friend. I can't remember how it happened, and in retrospect I'm pretty sure it was because he was gay, but still, there is hope.
Did you see the LJ post someone did, a week ago, comparing bullying to the hunting tactics of certain pack animals? If not, let me know and I'll look it up for you.
(the end)
Re: Comment part 3 of 3
October 13 2010, 23:38:11 UTC 6 years ago
But I am thinking that your last comment was referencing my LJ post here: http://cbpotts.livejournal.com/614994.h
Re: Comment part 3 of 3
6 years ago
Re: Comment part 3 of 3
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 22:47:34 UTC 6 years ago
October 13 2010, 23:01:47 UTC 6 years ago
Yes. This, exactly.
I started running track in high school - by chance, really, because I was a bookish ballerina and not inclined to team sports _at all._ But running gave me power, freedom - I couldn't run away from the words of the bullies echoing in my head, but running made me feel like I was going somewhere. I grew strong and fast. Eventually I found my own niche and grew confident in myself as a person, but I didn't find a way to quiet the bullies' voices until I rescued my first abused mustang. Handling her fear, healing the wounds bullies had left in her spirit somehow repaired the damage done to mine.
And now I will not, cannot, tolerate bullying of any sort. Not to children, not to adults, and not to animals. There is no excuse for the willful degradation of another and I have no patience for it. Both my children have been raised to stand up against bullies. They won't take flak from anyone and won't see it dished out in front of them, either. They stand up for underdogs and defend themselves if they're in that situation. They treat living things with respect and compassion.
I feel like that means I've won against the bullies who tried to tell me I was too weird to be worth anything.
6 years ago
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 22:56:07 UTC 6 years ago
October 15 2010, 16:12:06 UTC 6 years ago
I'm glad you're here with us now.
October 13 2010, 22:57:50 UTC 6 years ago
October 15 2010, 16:12:16 UTC 6 years ago
October 13 2010, 22:57:55 UTC 6 years ago
It's universal and it happens in every school and we all know about it. Those of us who were overjoyed to get out of school and escape our bullies are STILL talking about it decades later, but somehow the people who did the bullying forget instantly. And then when their kids bully or are bullied, they're shocked. Come ON.
You're awesome and I love you and I'm glad we both survived our bullies. I wouldn't have wanted to miss out on being friends with you.
October 14 2010, 00:43:59 UTC 6 years ago
The bullying sequence is similar to the mindset of the perpetrators of the Holocaust, and other genocides.
6 years ago
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 23:17:46 UTC 6 years ago
October 15 2010, 16:12:58 UTC 6 years ago
Sem-rambling. I have to think on this subject often.
October 13 2010, 23:20:34 UTC 6 years ago
It happened in junior high- fifth and sixth grade, mostly. I left the building crying on a pretty regular basis. The kids made fun of my height, my braces, my accent (I'd moved to Georgia from New York). I don't know what would have happened if we hadn't moved back north; getting to start over pretty much saved my life. I got to make myself into somebody else- somebody who wasn't a victim. And I did. Very deliberately.
So, fast forward, I'm a teacher now, and here's what I know about bullying. It happens to everyone. Seriously. Every single student that has passed through my doorway has been bullied by someone: maybe it's a peer, an older sibling, a parent, another adult, doesn't matter who... it's happened. The duration and severity vary. But it's happened.
The ones who bully others are the ones no one taught a better way to cope. I wish I knew the perfect solution to that, too, I really do, because it's one of the hardest parts of my job to try and break the cycle. But I try. I've literally put myself between one kid and another to stop a fight- which is hella scary- and I'd do it again. My colleagues and I all would. We do everything we can because, well, we're teachers. It's what we do.
I know it doesn't always work... because sometimes our sphere of influence just isn't big enough. That's a tough one to take because I don't know how we get every single influence in a bully's life to get on board with stopping their behavior. But I know that's the solution... so, y'know, if anyone figures out how to do it, you're a hero.
Re: Sem-rambling. I have to think on this subject often.
October 13 2010, 23:36:35 UTC 6 years ago
Re: Sem-rambling. I have to think on this subject often.
6 years ago
Re: Sem-rambling. I have to think on this subject often.
6 years ago
Re: Sem-rambling. I have to think on this subject often.
6 years ago
Re: Sem-rambling. I have to think on this subject often.
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 23:28:31 UTC 6 years ago
BTW, check out the It Gets Better Project on YouTube. It's aimed at GLBT youth, but the message is true for any victim of bullying. It really does get better. It did for me, too.
When Focus on the Family made their announcement that anti-bullying programs offered in schools were bad because they taught tolerance of homosexuality, I was furious. Apparently it is ok to bully the queers! They offer their own program which is available to schools. It suggests that faith and family are the appropriate way to address bullies. Also, that most victims simply "need to learn to act socially appropriate", so they won't be singled out. Part of my son's disability is the inability to read social cues. He can't get over this. It isn't going to get better. The only solution is teaching tolerance of differences and that bullying is unexceptable under any circumstance. In light of the number of highly publicized suicides by gay (or presumably gay) teens in the past month, I find Focus on the Family's silence appalling. Or maybe they think it's ok, because they were just fags.
October 15 2010, 16:14:09 UTC 6 years ago
Also, I very much love the It Gets Better project.
October 13 2010, 23:30:28 UTC 6 years ago
But there was one thing I learned, and it's that most bullies are not cowards anymore than the average person is. You hit a bully, they hit you back. What you have to do, is make it too expensive in time and effort to bother you, which is why ignoring them doesn't work. Make it so that there is easier prey out there. That's what I did, although the girl on girl bullying most likely has a different dynamic.
One thing bullies like to do, and it works in nature, is to separate their prey from the herd, and frighten and intimidate others out of helping. Just standing up for your friends, really does help.
October 15 2010, 16:14:37 UTC 6 years ago
October 13 2010, 23:51:57 UTC 6 years ago
I narrowly escaped physical bullying by growing very tall very fast and learning how to loom properly when someone drew back a fist. Every single time I thought "This is it. They're going to hit me and find out I'm all bluff and I will never be safe again."
I was "loser". I was "dyke". I was "freak", always "freak". I cried on the bus home more often than I can count, and then I dried my eyes and tried to look normal so Mom wouldn't get upset or worry.
Even as an adult, I'm still afraid that all the weakness, the wrongness that was blood in the water at school, will show through and it will start all over again.
Love you, Seanan.
October 14 2010, 02:44:17 UTC 6 years ago
Goooooooood times.
6 years ago
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 23:53:36 UTC 6 years ago
(I never wanted to give up toys either-and well, I haven't.I thought it was only me.)
October 15 2010, 16:15:15 UTC 6 years ago
bullying
October 13 2010, 23:56:27 UTC 6 years ago
Re: bullying
October 14 2010, 02:57:39 UTC 6 years ago
Re: bullying
6 years ago
October 13 2010, 23:59:01 UTC 6 years ago
October 15 2010, 16:26:17 UTC 6 years ago
October 14 2010, 00:33:17 UTC 6 years ago
I actually got off pretty lightly in the bullying stakes, considering how totally and utterly socially inept I was. I went to a school for 'gifted' children, and while I got teased for being weird, it was an occasional thing rather than a constant of my school life.
I still remember being pushed into a brick wall by a classmate, though. And being told off by a teacher inside the classroom the wall was attached to for yelling and disrupting her class. And being told by my mother, when I told her what happened, that the boy probably liked me, and was tormenting me to get my attention.
And then there was the time my Geography teacher literally declared to the class that it was 'Pick On Sarah Day'. While firing every question for the day at me (acceptable if not actually advisable on it's own), she turned a deaf ear to the teasing that most of the class, sensing an opportunity, immediately commenced with. After nearly an hour of verbal torment by my classmates, I was dragged up to the office in tears by my mum, and told by the Head Teacher of social sciences that 'Well, the teacher's leaving at the end of the term anyway, so I'll tell her not to do that again, and you only have to go to her class for another six weeks'.
Oh, wow. Didn't realise I was still holding on to all that.
Love you, Seanan. *Hugs*
October 15 2010, 16:30:10 UTC 6 years ago
6 years ago
6 years ago
October 14 2010, 00:40:20 UTC 6 years ago
My kid's going to public school, in part because there's no non-denominational private school around and I'd go insane very quickly if I had to be teacher as well as mom; she's an extrovert, she has an Asperger's diagnosis (it's the Big Stick to carry when speaking softly to teachers), and she cries oh-so-easily. Overall, she's such a sweet, bright kid that she's mostly gotten a fair number of teachers who like her (even though they also get frustrated by her disparity in intellect/emotion), including the head of Special Ed. Thank something.
Because if I hear that she's getting any bullying... Well, she had a nemesis in elementary, who started one school year pulling a couple hairs off my kid's head. I was on the phone pretty quickly, leaving messages. The principal did her best to quell that, but sadly, I hear that the new principal is one of those "it's not bullying if there aren't bruises" idiots. Dammit. At least we're away from it. O:( I'd hate to get in trouble for gut-punching a principle. (If my self-defense classes from years ago didn't kick in and send me for his eyes. Er.)
I only hope that I can be enough support for her that she'll be willing to speak up for other kids. It really helped when one of her friends decided to be assertive in her behalf, so...
*sigh* Yeah, coherency, not my strong suit at this moment.
October 15 2010, 16:30:41 UTC 6 years ago
I'm glad you're here.
6 years ago
6 years ago
6 years ago
October 14 2010, 00:54:17 UTC 6 years ago
I cry to think of what we would have lost had you been taken from us so long ago, and I hope that the story of your survival inspires some victimized young person out there to survive, in the hopes of eventually growing to kick ass like Seanan.
You found your niche. You've found friends who adore you and will defend you. You're safe now.
Thank you for being who you are.
PS: Read the Lisbeth Salander books by Stieg Larsson in your theoretical spare time. I'm finding the second one, especially, to be an inspirational story of fighting back and surviving against fisked up bullies, schools and the whole institutional network that is suppost to support and instead acts as the handmaidens of violent assholes.
I've posted my bullying story to your diary, the last time you had an entry like this....just to reiterate: I could have handled kid-bullies, if only there had been grown-ups who bothered to stand with me against them, even to acknowledge that they were in the wrong and I was the innocent injured. Kids don't know what they're doing. Adults who condone and enable are the ones I blame.
October 15 2010, 16:31:27 UTC 6 years ago
October 14 2010, 00:54:21 UTC 6 years ago
Like most of the people who commented, both my wife and I were bullied as kids. The last month's worth of news has caused a lot of memories to resurface of those years, some that I'd completely forgotten, and none of them pleasant.
We made the choice to not send our kids to the parochial schools we grew up in, because we see the evidence in our neighbors' kids that bullying is alive and well there. ("Teaching Values to Last a Lifetime" my ass. Some values, if you ask me.)
However, we know that bullies will be anywhere you go. We tell our kids that they have to tell us what is going on, because we can't help them if they don't tell us. The teachers need to know, otherwise they can't help. We are very lucky in that the schools our kids attend do take bullying seriously, and work hard to stamp it out, but it only goes so far. You can't fix an unknown, so you have to stand up and speak out.
Thanks for speaking out.
October 15 2010, 16:31:46 UTC 6 years ago
Thanks for being here.
October 14 2010, 01:10:00 UTC 6 years ago
The fact that your post made me feel lucky in that way says nothing good about the world.
October 15 2010, 16:31:58 UTC 6 years ago
And the world needs help.
Deleted comment
October 15 2010, 16:32:08 UTC 6 years ago
October 14 2010, 01:28:03 UTC 6 years ago
I keep wondering if there's any way to start widespread reform of this country's school system. As a friend put it, "It works averagely for the average student." Anyone outside of that average tends to be fair game for bullying. There has to be a way to level the playing field so that students are nicer to each other and most actually enjoy being at school.
October 15 2010, 16:32:27 UTC 6 years ago
← Ctrl ← Alt
Ctrl → Alt →