That's good, UncaYimmy, but to me that's just part of normal child rearing. It certainly was part of mine. It didn't help at all when I encountered my bully. You seem to have a very determined picture of what bullying is like, and what a bully's victim is like. I don't think you are right.
I have stated already that there are no absolutes. There are patterns and common behaviors. If there weren't, we wouldn't be labeling people bullies and victims. It's all a matter of degree.
Do you think I don't understand bullies because I was never bullied? Did you ever a classmate you barely knew stand up for you with a bully? Some kids I went to school with did, and that guy was me. Did you ever see a bully standing by his locker when some other kid walked by, drove a shoulder into the guy, then stopped and dared the bully to do something about it? That was me. Ever sit in class while a teacher bullied a student and heard another student say, "Lay off." That was me. Ever been standing in line while the guy at the head of the line berates the clerk and see somebody walk up to the guy, talk quietly, and then see the guy walk away? That was me.
I know bullies because not only do I engage them when I can, I'll even seek them out. Always have.
What I don't understand are the victims. I'm trying to, but when I ask questions, I'm accused of ulterior motives. See below for more.
And standing up for yourself, as you call it, is not always possible. Besides, you shouldn't have to, should you? To be timid, or afraid of confrontation, is not a crime. Bullying is still the fault of the bully.
I never said it was always possible. The fact that it's not always possible doesn't mean that it's never possible.
As for the bully being at "fault" on a moral level, I honestly don't see how that's relevant. Bullies are bad. I'm all for doing whatever we can as parents and authority figures to prevent bullies from being "groomed" and to prevent them from ever bullying anybody, but even in Star Trek they still had bullies. Learning to deal with them is an important life skill, and learning what behaviors help a bully select you as a target and continue to select you as a target is something worth knowing.
I
know that. I knew that as a little kid. I have never once suggested that anybody
be like me. What I have asked about and suggested are specific courses of action. People who are nothing like me have done the same things I have done.
Some people are timid. I get that. Some are afraid. I get that. Hell, I've been afraid. You think my heart wasn't pounding when my boss told me to do what she said or go home? Of course it was. Fear is an emotion just like anger. If you can speak calmly and not lash out when you're angry, why can't you speak calmly and stand up for yourself when you're scared? Nobody
likes being scared. It's something we have to deal with.
Is it hard? Damn right it is. Is it easier for me than others? At the risk of being accused of bragging or whatever, I have to honestly say that yes, it's easier for me. In pack animals there are alpha males (and females, not being sexist here). Are they
taught how to be alphas? I don't think so. You can look at a litter of puppies and pick out the alphas and the weak ones. We all have different temperaments, and those are evident in infancy (look at reactions to loud noises).
One year my co-workers sent a man in a gorilla suit to scare me. Out of the blue this hulking, dark, hairy creature jumped into my office. It scared the crap out of me. Somebody snapped a photo of me at that exact moment. Later a few people pointed out that while I had scooted my chair back (flight), I was actually standing up and making fists. They thought it was funny.
I bring this up because that was my
natural reaction. I don't take credit for it. I didn't
decide on that reaction, I just reacted in an instinctive way. If America's Funniest Home Videos is any indicator, that's not a common reaction. Sometimes you see a person strike back, but most of the time it's pure flight.
Short of some serious mental reconditioning, somebody who doesn't naturally do that won't do it. I would probably have to suffer a traumatic event for me to lose that instinctive reaction. So, yeh, I
get that I'm just not like most people and certainly not like most victims of bullying.
But we're not dogs. We can learn new behaviors. We can learn to overcome our emotions. We teach our children this from birth - otherwise we'd all be tantrum-throwing thieves who never shared anything with anybody and only cared about ourselves. Obviously, it's a matter of degree. No matter how hard I've tried to overcome my fear of heights, I can't make myself sit on a cliff with my feet dangling over. I can put one foot to the edge and keep the other foot back a few feet, which took a lot of effort. My heart still pounds, I still get dizzy, and I sweat profusely. So when I say "overcome" notice I didn't modify it with "entirely."
So, if you're scared, timid, hate confrontation or whatever, I can relate. I'm sure for some there's very little they can do without an enormous amount of effort and diligence, but that doesn't mean
nobody can try to find a way to use some of the techniques I've suggested. People with serious anger management issues can get better. Most will never be the kind, even-keeled person that I perceive LibraryLady to be, but that doesn't mean they have to be Idi Amin.