So far I have learned that:
* It is perfectly feasible to elevate your own experience to ideal, just as long as you were bullied yourself. If anyone else's experience is different from yours then they are either whining or the solution is not applicable to them and no other solution is proffered. Your experience is the only one that counts. Natch.
* Behaviour that is illegal between adults is perfectly ok between kids or teens.
* Bullies have no responsibility to alter their behaviour and there should be no attempts to try to force them to.
* Anyone trying to address the problem is a whiny bitch and should shut up and let the bullies get on with it. It's only kids, after all, and if they weren't so damn different it wouldn't happen to them, it would happen to some other kid and who cares what happens to some other kid? The problem isn't the bullying. It's that it's happening to X. Once it happens to Y, the problem is solved.
* There is absolutely no way to harrass, stalk or hurt someone over the internet.
* Only the physical part of bullying counts. The slow erosion of self worth, confidence and sense of self is piffle. Being hated by everyone in your known universe has no effect on anyone ever. People don't really need all that once they reach "the real world".
* A state in which a person resides for at least ten to twelve years of their life is not "the real world". Its transitory state means that anything can be endured. Kids aren't really people after all. That's why it's AOK to Abu Graib them until they hang themselves. By this logic, I have still to live in the real world for as long as I existed in that world, but hey - at least I'm a real person and not a kid.
Did I miss anything?
My friend Nika obviously had it coming for not just fighting off the hockey dudes who liked to throw cans at her. Her scoliosis, and the hereditary degenerative disease which caused all the joints in her body to meld and stopped her growth at 4'10" is no *********** excuse not to learn karate. (Actually, she did take Judo as part of her physical therapy. Didn't help much against a 200lbs hockey forward.)
I fought those ******** for her. But do you know what? I shouldn't have had to. And I damn well shouldn't have had to be at the principal's office once or twice a week getting a lecture on why it isn't ladylike to get into fights and how it was no excuse that I was defending Nika - because that meant they weren't mean to me, so I had NO reason. (Well, that resolved itself when they started picking on me for standing up for Nika. Except that it turned out that defending myself wasn't a good enough reason for a girl to fight after all.) I don't think it is acceptable that Nika would have to take a week off from school every spring when I went skiing with my parents, because with no madzer to bite the kneecaps off her bullies around, she was fair game. (And also had no one who thought the fact that she was intelligent and knew **** made her worthwhile, to counterbalance the pure hate from everyone who didn't like people with their arms in weird metal straighteners.)
It felt extremely good to fling her most detested pest into a radiator (didn't aim for the radiator, accident) and strand him at home for two days with a concussion. That time, I got into no trouble because he was bloody well not admitting to being maimed by a 5' girl.
Still shouldn't have had to. Adults should have seen, acted and handled before I had to do that.
So what if sticking out makes you an obvious target? (and I'm not agreeing to that either, lots of cases start out with a normal conflict and the craziest party sets the agenda afterwards) Still isn't OK, and we shouldn't allow kids to think it is.
What we are doing, letting the bullies set the agenda, demanding that the victims modify their behaviour, forbidding people to talk about it later in life, by calling them whiny and scaring anyone still in that situation from telling anyone - what we are doing by that is letting the maddest define reality.
We are a society. Not an anarchic pseudo-Darwinist biodome set up to study ferrets in their natural habitat.
Bullying is by its nature not a conflict. It's abuse. Treating it like a conflict is double punishing the victim. There ARE schools in Norway who have had good results with a zero tolerance on both conflict and abuse - nothing is ever allowed to escalate. The tiniest scuffle leads to a trip to the principal, who does not hand out punishments, but tries to find the root to the conflict and negotiate an agreement. (It's a bit like a punishment though, because it likely bores the **** out of the culprits.) All the grown ups in a school environment need to be a presence in the kids' lives and bullying needs to have immediate and proportionate response. At the best schools (from bullying prevention point of view) I went to, janitors and dinner-staff where as much a presence as the teachers - and the headmaster wasn't hiding in his chambers, but made himself visible all through the day.
A small pet peeve of mine is the architecture of most schools. There are far too many secluded spots and odd corners. It ought to be possible for only a couple of adults to surveil a big area and wtf is up with all these schoolyards with different kinds of thorny bushes as the only green? Do they WANT the bullies to have somewhere thorny to push people? A surveiled recess area for quiet pursuits could prove a haven for persecuted kids. At mine and Nika's school that was the school library, until it was closed over lunch recess when staff was cut from two librarians to one.
They really thought all the librarians did was guard the books? Hell, the librarians were the angels of the bullied. Unlike teachers, they never accepted any bullying in their library, and had the authority to send the bullies packing, as long as there were two of them.