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Being bullied

I almost wanted to catch up with the girl that terrorized me through 8th grade and learn that she was in some mental hospital with a straight jacket or on death row; maybe just stuck home, with 8 kids living off the system. To my great disappointment, I noticed through friends of friends on FB, that she looked normal; married with a couple of kids, no facial scars from bar-room brawls. The one kid I did know through friends to end up a murderer was the last kid I would expect. He wasn't shy or quiet, nor was he outrageously loud. One day, soon after high school he snapped and stabbed his father and his father's girlfriend.
 
Whoa, talk about a false dichotomy. I certainly am not in favor of bullying but rather in favor of a realistic worldview. I thought that was one thing the majority of us had in common?



I'm not saying it didn't hurt, of course it hurt. Sometimes life hurts. I spent 2 years in a wheelchair in grade school and I am not white. I moved 12 times before I finished high school. I put up with bullies myself. So those of you that were picked on a bit and it affects you now... You're not special. I would wager almost everyone got a bit of it.

But while we are on the subject, I am fairly well together. I understand the world is not always a nice place and I do not demand the world change to fit my notions of what it should be. I do not ask for nor accept special treatment simply because I may be 'different'.



So when would be the appropriate age to figure out life lessons? 8 year old children make theological decisions as well, at least I did. How long do you think they should hold mommy's hand and have mommy make all the decisions for the kid?

We're on the same page. It sucks. Got it. It's unfair. Roger. But it happens and will continue to happen. Tornadoes happen too and they suck and they're unfair. It's all part of growing up.



No, I'm not good at breaking bad news. But I'll give it a shot.

"Your kid couldn't cope with the bullying and abuse and committed suicide. It's tragic."

And it is. Life sometimes is. Any specific case you can bring up, some seem to go beyond bullying. In any case, what do you plan to do about it? Stop every knucklehead that wants a giggle at someone else's expense?

If you stop every lunkhead from picking on the math geek than I believe you are ready to hold the tides.

Wa... You're bullying me with your mocking tone and sarcasm.

Dear Foxholeatheist,

during my years at JREF I have never had any specific opinion on you.

Now I have. It involves wearing certain parts of one's anatomy as headgear.

You manage to sum up exactly the opinions of a bully and grown up bully-enablers in two short posts proving that you are, in effect, a bully.

And you smell bad.
 
Well, as many of you know, my bully died in an auto accident while in high school.

As to handling the situation better, had I been a 55 year old in a 13 year old body, I'm betting the whole thing wouldn't have happened. Unfortunately, I was only a 13 year old in a 13 year old body.
 
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There's a difference between "drawing it to you" and "being a target that will take it." I think you are clearly the latter. Your response was to take it and then to go to a higher authority - classic victim behavior. Your "meta message" is, "you're not allowed to yell at me like that because the boss says you're not" when in my opinion it should be, "I don't give a damn who you think you are, but you are not going to address me like that."

I had written a reply about my experiences, but I think a better approach is to ask you a few questions. First, what would it take to convince you that your personality and actions play a factor in the frequency, extent and/or duration of the bullying you encounter? The fact that others seemingly get bullied by this woman is no surprise. Bully bosses tend to hire and keep around those they can bully.

Why didn't you stand up and walk out?

Why didn't you say, "Hold that thought. Let's go to human resources right now and continue this conversation."

Why didn't you yell back something like, "I don't care if you are my boss, it doesn't entitle you to yell at me. I don't care if your boss tolerates it, I won't. Show me the respect I deserve."

Has anybody ever done that to her?

I ask because in my life I can only think of one instance where somebody yelled at me for more than 10 seconds (excluding when I pissed off people on the phone as a bill collector, which is another matter entirely). That instance was a cop, where the imbalance of power was tremendous, and I risked serious consequences if I didn't tread carefully. As it was I didn't back down in any way. I did not apologize for all the things he thought I did wrong on my motorcycle (Note: if you don't ride, don't lecture those of us who do on the safest way to avoid an accident). It lasted about 20 seconds, and he was clearly uncomfortable with the crowd that had surrounded us, so he quickly left without giving me a ticket (I didn't deserve one anyway).

That was a decent effort, but as a tactic it failed on so many levels, I simply couldn't respect it in the end.

I've spent the last hour trying to compose an appropriate response, while fully realizing the entire time that, by trying, I'm allowing you and your not very subtle jabs to manipulate me. I finally decided not to respond that way.

I will say that I noted where you gave contradictory "advice," have noted the slurs and jabs you inserted (again, not very subtly), and note that people often have an ulterior and ugly motive behind asking, "why didn't you?" Given our history, I do question your motives and believe I know them.

I will tell you that most of what you framed as "suggestions" don't even apply to my workplace. For instance, there is no such thing as an "HR" department to go to. I went to the right and only person I could go to. But she doesn't even show up for two hours after I start work, so there was literally no one else in that office to whom "we" could take the matter as it unfolded.

You knew none of this when you made your "suggestions." Does knowing it now change your opinion? Or will you, as I expect, take another opportunity to make this my fault? I already know I did nothing wrong in this incident. I handled it appropriately to obtain my desired goal.

That's where we differ, and I suspect you knew that as you wrote, and wrote deliberately.

My objective in relating the tale to begin with was to show that adults experience bullying too. It usually differs in certain respects from the kind found in childhood, but it does still occasionally happen. That you chose to respond by telling me I handled it like a victim is, in itself, an attempt to victimize me again. It hasn't worked.

The reason it hasn't worked is that I didn't tell this story to get advice on how to stand up to a bully. In this instance, standing up to the bully was never my objective. That's a very important distinction, and the reason why your entire post, as I said above, utterly fails. Standing up to this bully, in this specific circumstance, was never my objective.

My goal was only to do what I had to do to keep my job. And I did that. I'm still employed.

Your advice, and your thoughts, on this incident as they pertain specifically to me are not welcome, wanted, or required. Do not offer them to me again.
 
As to handling the situation better, had I been a 55 year old in a 13 year old body, I'm betting the whole thing wouldn't have happened. Unfortunately, I was only a 13 year old in a 13 year old body.

Amen Sister! :)
 
I've debated about posting my story here. I didn't have it nearly as bad as some of you, but I did get teased and bullied sometimes at school, so I know how it feels. And in other ways, I got it worse than you, because I had a bully that none of you has ever mentioned.

My own father.

He was mentally and emotionally abusive, but never physically. Not that it matters, all abuse is horrible. I can't even begin to explain every episode, every incident that happened. But imagine, everything that you went through at school, the torture, the anxiety, the helplessness, it all happened at home, for me. There was no escape; home was never a refuge. And this was definitely one bully that I absolutely could not stand up to. Like library lady said, I was a child in a child's body, not an adult.

I would venture that growing up this way actually set me up for being bullied in school. My father taught me how to be a victim; I was a ready-made target. I didn't get bullied daily at school, however. It was at random times, usually when my "friends" weren't with me at the time. So, when my father found out that I was being bullied, his brilliant advice was to punch them first, and he would deal with the repercussions later. :rolleyes: Yeah, I never followed his advice. I don't know what made the bullies stop. I never did anything to stop them, but after a while they just gave up.

And I dealt with my father, the bully. But I had to be an adult. I didn't have the confidence nor the strength before then. And like a typical bully, he refuses to own up to his actions, and instead blames our problems on me. Well, that's why I haven't talked to him in five years, and had minimal contact before then.

I suppose some of the bully supporters here could say I've just "avoided" the problem, rather than dealing with it. I did try to deal with it. It didn't work. He didn't listen to me, or even seriously consider what I said. All he did was blame me for everything. He wouldn't take responsibility for abusing me for 16 years. There is no way to make him understand, so avoiding the problem is now the best solution.
 
I've debated about posting my story here. I didn't have it nearly as bad as some of you, but I did get teased and bullied sometimes at school, so I know how it feels. And in other ways, I got it worse than you, because I had a bully that none of you has ever mentioned.

My own father.

He was mentally and emotionally abusive, but never physically. Not that it matters, all abuse is horrible. I can't even begin to explain every episode, every incident that happened. But imagine, everything that you went through at school, the torture, the anxiety, the helplessness, it all happened at home, for me. There was no escape; home was never a refuge. And this was definitely one bully that I absolutely could not stand up to. Like library lady said, I was a child in a child's body, not an adult.

I would venture that growing up this way actually set me up for being bullied in school. My father taught me how to be a victim; I was a ready-made target. I didn't get bullied daily at school, however. It was at random times, usually when my "friends" weren't with me at the time. So, when my father found out that I was being bullied, his brilliant advice was to punch them first, and he would deal with the repercussions later. :rolleyes: Yeah, I never followed his advice. I don't know what made the bullies stop. I never did anything to stop them, but after a while they just gave up.

And I dealt with my father, the bully. But I had to be an adult. I didn't have the confidence nor the strength before then. And like a typical bully, he refuses to own up to his actions, and instead blames our problems on me. Well, that's why I haven't talked to him in five years, and had minimal contact before then.

I suppose some of the bully supporters here could say I've just "avoided" the problem, rather than dealing with it. I did try to deal with it. It didn't work. He didn't listen to me, or even seriously consider what I said. All he did was blame me for everything. He wouldn't take responsibility for abusing me for 16 years. There is no way to make him understand, so avoiding the problem is now the best solution.
I can't imagine. How old are yoou now?
 
This brings up painful memories. I appreciate the many stories. Thanks LL and TM.

I remember when I was in first or second grade being shaken down for my milk money every day by a much larger, older kid, and how fearful I was when walking to school and during recess, and how all-consuming that fear was. One day I snapped and punched him in the stomach in front of what seemed like the whole school. He cried like a baby and it never happened again. Some of those old sayings are true.

Worse than that though are my memories of being cruel to other kids. Ugh.

I've worried about my son (now 17) in the past because he's one of the shortest kids in his class and I'm guessing that he would keep it to himself if he had problems, like I did. In general, things seems to be much better now than when I was a kid. But still, there have been some disturbing local incidents of teachers and administrators neglecting situations that got way out of hand.
 
I'm sorry you had to go through this. If you have kids or plan to ever have kids I might if I were you advise them to keep their sexual orientation to themselves. This doesn't give some gang of losers the right to torment you or anyone else.

I have 3 kids age 3,8 and 11
My oldest was bullied (just because he is shy) so last year I pulled both of them out of public school and now have them in a Charter school. It is much better since 99% of it is homeschooling and they only go in twice a week to the school.

Originally Posted by qayak
Interesting that all the bullies in everyone else's experience went on to become murderers. All the bullies I ever knew are pretty much normal members of society these days.

The only murderer I know I went to school with was a strange little dude. A couple years after graduation he picked up a girl at a bar, took her to a gravel pit where he raped, beat and strangled her. A few weeks later he broke into a house while the parents were at church and raped, beat and shot their sixteen year old daughter with a 12 guage shotgun.
The ones still alive are normal people running around from what I saw of them on the myspace group for my high school. There was three of them that in 12th grade died from drunk driving.
 
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That was a decent effort, but as a tactic it failed on so many levels, I simply couldn't respect it in the end.

I've spent the last hour trying to compose an appropriate response, while fully realizing the entire time that, by trying, I'm allowing you and your not very subtle jabs to manipulate me. I finally decided not to respond that way.

I regret that my approach did not yield the results I was hoping for. However, let me assure you that I don't jab - I slug. If I ask, "why didn't you..." I mean it as the simple question it is. If I wanted to cast aspersions on your character, I would have written, "Were you too cowardly to..." or "Anybody with even a modicum of self respect would have..." Instead I asked simple, direct questions because I do not understand why you didn't take any of the approaches that first came to my mind.

Hell, I don't understand why my wife cannot simply tell a door-to-door salesman, "I'm not interested," and shut the door. I don't understand why I've had several people over the years ask me to go with them to car dealerships. I mean, I understand that they want me to do what they can't, but I don't understand why they "can't" do it themselves.

The last time I did it, we asked for specific models of used cars in a certain price range. The first car they brought out was newer and well past the upper price limit. My friend was ready to test drive it anyway. I said, "We told you what we wanted, and that's not it. We're leaving." I took her by the arm, and we walked.

The salesman started to follow us and try to convince us. I turned to him and said, "You need to leave. Now." By the time we reached our car, the sales manager was running out to apologize. I told him, "If you want to give us another salesman who will bring out only what we ask for, we'll return. Otherwise, we're gone." He did, and things went smoothly from there.

I genuinely don't understand why some people find this so difficult.

I will say that I noted where you gave contradictory "advice," have noted the slurs and jabs you inserted (again, not very subtly), and note that people often have an ulterior and ugly motive behind asking, "why didn't you?" Given our history, I do question your motives and believe I know them.
Believe what you will. I don't "disguise" my "motives." The worst I can be accused of is phrasing things so that they fit within the confines of the Membership Agreement. For example, right now I have no problems whatsoever saying that based on your reaction, I question just how reliable your stories of "bullying" are. You're seeing manipulation and "ugly" motives where none were intended simply because I asked direct questions. Some people just can't handle confrontation very well and see attacks and bullying where others see nothing of the kind. So, if you interpret my simple questions as slurs and jabs, I question whether you and I would agree on whether a given situation you experienced was bullying.

I will tell you that most of what you framed as "suggestions" don't even apply to my workplace. For instance, there is no such thing as an "HR" department to go to. I went to the right and only person I could go to. But she doesn't even show up for two hours after I start work, so there was literally no one else in that office to whom "we" could take the matter as it unfolded.

My specific suggestion in that specific incident at that specific time may not apply, but the principle does. Have all the times you've been "bullied" occurred before the boss came in? Why didn't you later that morning ask your supervisor to join you in the boss's office and then say, "Please say to me exactly what you said to me earlier this morning in the same tone and volume. I want to know if this is acceptable behavior."

You knew none of this when you made your "suggestions." Does knowing it now change your opinion? Or will you, as I expect, take another opportunity to make this my fault? I already know I did nothing wrong in this incident. I handled it appropriately to obtain my desired goal.
I thought of the things that I would have done and asked why you didn't do the same. As I said, your behavior is classic victim behavior. You allowed the person to berate you, and rather than assert your right as a human being to not be treated like that, you relied upon someone else to handle the situation for you. Your boss will likely hear the other side of the story, and I'm willing to bet it won't sound so egregious when your supervisor tells it. You'll come across as somebody overly sensitive. The supervisor may even say something like, "If it was so bad, why didn't she speak up at the time? She's just embarrassed because she screwed up, and she's whining after the fact because she's too immature to handle it like a grown up."

The boss, who didn't witness it and who probably doesn't want to devote anymore effort to this than necessary, may say something like, "Well, watch your tone with her in the future."

And thus the cycle will continue. I don't know what you think you accomplished, but I'm willing to bet not much. If you're 51 years old and still getting yelled at like a child, it's time to ask yourself why.

That's where we differ, and I suspect you knew that as you wrote, and wrote deliberately.
Didn't know what? That you had no HR department? In a small company, the boss is the "HR department." That your boss wasn't in the office yet? What am I, a mind reader?

What about my other "suggestions" where you face the person and demand to be treated with the respect you deserve?

My objective in relating the tale to begin with was to show that adults experience bullying too. It usually differs in certain respects from the kind found in childhood, but it does still occasionally happen. That you chose to respond by telling me I handled it like a victim is, in itself, an attempt to victimize me again. It hasn't worked.
I find your reaction to be more classic victim behavior because you felt like I was trying to "victimize" you but failed. I never denied that adult bullying happens. In fact, I stated explicitly that it does happen. I'm trying to understand why it seems to happen to some people on a regular basis while others almost never experience it. Have you noticed that nobody so far has shared stories of adult bullying after having a childhood free of bullying or being a bully themselves? I'm not saying that never happens, but it doesn't need to be an absolute for there to be patterns.

The reason it hasn't worked is that I didn't tell this story to get advice on how to stand up to a bully. In this instance, standing up to the bully was never my objective. That's a very important distinction, and the reason why your entire post, as I said above, utterly fails. Standing up to this bully, in this specific circumstance, was never my objective.

My goal was only to do what I had to do to keep my job. And I did that. I'm still employed.

If you had said, "Do not speak to me in that manner. I find it disrespectful. You're my supervisor, and I will do as you direct, but I will not sit here and be verbally berated," your job would have been at risk?

What was your objective in telling the boss?

Your advice, and your thoughts, on this incident as they pertain specifically to me are not welcome, wanted, or required. Do not offer them to me again.
If you do not want to see my comments, then put me on ignore. This is a public forum, and I will post my comments within the bounds of the Membership Agreement. If you feel I have violated the MA, report my posts. While you may not find any value in my comments about your situation, maybe somebody else in a similar situation will.
 
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I regret that my approach did not yield the results I was hoping for. However, let me assure you that I don't jab - I slug. If I ask, "why didn't you..." I mean it as the simple question it is. If I wanted to cast aspersions on your character, I would have written, "Were you too cowardly to..." or "Anybody with even a modicum of self respect would have..." Instead I asked simple, direct questions because I do not understand why you didn't take any of the approaches that first came to my mind.

[...]

If you do not want to see my comments, then put me on ignore. This is a public forum, and I will post my comments within the bounds of the Membership Agreement. If you feel I have violated the MA, report my posts. While you may not find any value in my comments about your situation, maybe somebody else in a similar situation will.

Damn, you are so cool...
 
...
If you had said, "Do not speak to me in that manner. I find it disrespectful. You're my supervisor, and I will do as you direct, but I will not sit here and be verbally berated," your job would have been at risk?

What was your objective in telling the boss?


If you do not want to see my comments, then put me on ignore. This is a public forum, and I will post my comments within the bounds of the Membership Agreement. If you feel I have violated the MA, report my posts. While you may not find any value in my comments about your situation, maybe somebody else in a similar situation will.

I see you persist. In spite of my clearly telling you your persistence is unwanted.

I wonder why you do that?
 
I see you persist. In spite of my clearly telling you your persistence is unwanted.

I wonder why you do that?

I see you persist in trying to bully me into not speaking my mind on a public forum in which we both in theory have equal standing. I did nothing to deserve this type of treatment or draw it to me. It's not my fault that in a public discussion you are not comfortable with my comments about your opinions yet you expect me to quietly accept your negative comments about my opinions and do as you say without question.

I wonder why you do that?
 
I have 3 kids age 3,8 and 11
My oldest was bullied (just because he is shy) so last year I pulled both of them out of public school and now have them in a Charter school. It is much better since 99% of it is homeschooling and they only go in twice a week to the school.
I'm typically opposed to homeschooling, but never considered homeschooling as an anti-bully move.

I regret that my approach did not yield the results I was hoping for. However, let me assure you that I don't jab - I slug. If I ask, "why didn't you..." I mean it as the simple question it is. If I wanted to cast aspersions on your character, I would have written, "Were you too cowardly to..." or "Anybody with even a modicum of self respect would have..." Instead I asked simple, direct questions because I do not understand why you didn't take any of the approaches that first came to my mind.

Hell, I don't understand why my wife cannot simply tell a door-to-door salesman, "I'm not interested," and shut the door. I don't understand why I've had several people over the years ask me to go with them to car dealerships. I mean, I understand that they want me to do what they can't, but I don't understand why they "can't" do it themselves.

The last time I did it, we asked for specific models of used cars in a certain price range. The first car they brought out was newer and well past the upper price limit. My friend was ready to test drive it anyway. I said, "We told you what we wanted, and that's not it. We're leaving." I took her by the arm, and we walked.

The salesman started to follow us and try to convince us. I turned to him and said, "You need to leave. Now." By the time we reached our car, the sales manager was running out to apologize. I told him, "If you want to give us another salesman who will bring out only what we ask for, we'll return. Otherwise, we're gone." He did, and things went smoothly from there.

I genuinely don't understand why some people find this so difficult.
What an incredibly charming individual you are.
 
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slingblade said:
I see you persist. In spite of my clearly telling you your persistence is unwanted.

I wonder why you do that?
He told you. He's "just asking questions". Apparently he's very proud of his ability to stand up to people, and can't possibly fathom why everyone else aren't as awesome as he is.

Not that I don't feel that way all the time, but still, you're not suppsoed to say it (:p :p)!

TraneWreck said:
Careful, you don't want to end up on the list of people he made fun of in his signature.

There's no recovering from that.
:fear:
 
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I too never thought of Charter Schools and home schooling as an anti-bullying measure. However, I've been trying to think of ways I could help even though I'm not a parent and don't really have a lot of contact with kids. There are a horde of anti-bullying Web sites out there (try Googling), but I'm hoping to look further into it.

ETA: There's a good article in the journal Childhood Education August 15, 2008.

Research studies and statistics on bullying and violence of schoolchildren show that the above incidents are not unique, and that aggressive acts are neither uncommon nor restricted to a few countries. Making comparisons of statistics across countries can be difficult, since definitions of bullying and legal requirements vary (Ananiadou & Smith, 2002). A 2001-02 cross-national survey of 162,000 children ages 11, 13, and 15, in 35 countries, conducted by the World Health Organization of Europe, published these findings: overall bullying at school, 34 percent; repeated bullying, 11 percent; countries with the lowest rates of bullying--the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Sweden (Craig & Harel, 2004). The Education Guardian reported a study of bullying among secondary students of differing backgrounds in Europe that showed first-generation immigrants attracted negative attention due to their language, dress, skin color, racial differences, and religion (Lipsett, 2008). When children were asked whether bullying was a problem in school, the responses in the affirmative for each country were as follows: Italy (33 percent); Portugal (35 percent); Netherlands (16 percent); UK (48 percent); Belgium (21 percent); Scotland (43 percent); Wales (32 percent); Germany (29 percent); and Spain (22 percent).
 
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