Been bullied from 3rd to 10th grade. I´m not in the mood to go into details. Got the usual useless advice from parents.
There is, however, a happy memory... well two actually.
The first is, I was riding the bus to school, with two of the bullies right next to me; this must have been 5th or 6th grade. They kept taunting me over and over; I was pretty easy to upset, but physically weaker than either of them, and a whiner and a coward, I have to admit.
Then, for some reason, I said "Stop it, or else..."
They laughed. "Or else... what?"
"Or else, I´m gonna hit you."
"You - and which army?"
At that point, somehow I just snapped, and punched one of them on the nose - just hard enough for it to start bleeding.
You should have seen the look on their faces; I guess nobody ever tried to resist them, judging from how they were whining about the one guy having been punched. It´s really a pity, looking back at it, that this happened on the way home, instead of on the way to school; *nobody* at school would have believed them if they explained the bleeding nose by saying that I, of all people, had punched one of them.
By the way, neither of them ever attended a class re-union; I like to think that´s because they are afraid of me.
The other thing is, a while later, after one of the abovementioned bullies had left school, the other had taken to extorting money from me; since "accidents" could happen during cooking classes or PE, his threats were credible enough to me. After a while I worked up the courage to tell a teacher about this, who, oddly enough, didn´t just ignore this as teachers usually do. Shortly thereafter, I was cited before the headmaster, who was meeting with the bully´s father, the bully himself, the teacher I had told about this, and two of my classmates. It turned out I hadn´t been his only victim, and he´d been trying to earn a little tax-free extra to supplement his lunch money. The bully´s family was of middle-eastern origin, and I didn´t know a word of Farsi (still don´t), but I have to say I still enjoyed listening to the bully being verbally cut to pieces by his father in front of his victims.