I thought about this some and you know, I've been on both sides of the stick as I am fairly sure we all have. I'm sure most of us have bullied and most of us have been been bullied. Both as children and also as we get a little older.
It's not a crisis. It's not extreme abuse. I believe it's normal human behavior.
This only means you've never experienced this as extreme abuse. You seem unable to understand what happens to a person when this kind of behavior starts when you are very young, and continues
on a daily basis for years.
Somewhere along the line many of you picked up the idea that you deserve to live in a world where no one would ever make fun of you or hurt you and anything other than that is somehow abnormal. Negative.
We picked up that idea from being the ones who were so often singled out for negative attention, while noticing that some of our peers never
seemed to receive it. Bear in mind, those of us who were 5 or 6 years old when it started were also too young to understand that the way things
seem is often not really how things
are. But while you're undergoing this, your psyche is being developed by it.
I learned something just a couple of years ago, and every time I think about it, I start to cry, to literally grieve. Because you see, if I had known about this back when I was starting school, I would have had the power to minimize it and my life could have been much different, and happier.
When I was bullied, I got only two bits of advice on how to handle it. The first and most often given was: "just ignore it. They'll stop if you don't react." This is
not true. They only try harder if they get ignored, and it only gets worse. It gets to the point where ignoring it is impossible: you can't ignore being shoved into the lockers, being tripped in the halls, being knocked down and kicked on the playground. This is absolutely the most wrong advice one could give.
The other advice was to hit back, and that only got me in worse trouble with authority. I never came out the winner by hitting, never reduced an ounce of the bullying.
Then just a couple of years ago, I came across the response that would have worked, had I known about it, or thought of doing it: Go along to get along.
When the first kid ever made fun of me in Kindergarten, the right thing to do would have been "play the good sport and laugh with them! Make fun of yourself, just a little, and laugh
with them." This disarms a bully. They expect you to cry, to get mad, to hit or crumple, but not to agree with them! If you just keep disarming them, being a good sport, the sport gets pretty boring. You're not reacting the way they need you to react, so you're no fun anymore.
Oh, gods, how I wish I had known to do this...
Seriously. Punch them in the throat.
Seriously, that's assault. It's against most school policies and certainly against the law. No matter how you've been bullied, once you hit, you're in the wrong. Period.
Or it's social, non-violent equal, whatever the situation calls for.
And what would that be, specifically? I'm never sure what the right thing to do, much less the thing to do to make the person stop, would be.
Luckily I was raised in the real world where not everyone likes me, I am not special and not everyone is my buddy and I can cope, even thrive under stress.
That's rude. You make me (and the rest of us) look ridiculous with your assertion of a need I don't even have. I know not everyone will like me, because I don't like everyone. But I still know how to behave. That I don't like someone doesn't mean it's okay to belittle them, hit them, ridicule them, and make sport of them before our peers, does it? Fine, don't like me, but don't then abuse me. Just leave me alone, or interact with me in a neutral way.
I was raised in the real world, too, thanks, and I really resent your assertion that I expect sunshine and rainbows every day.
No, really. That was incredibly rude and condescending. Thanks, tons. Come here so I can punch you in the throat.
