The Bullying Problem

Lots of folks are writing about bullies lately, but as far as I can tell (I won't try to claim I've read every article/blog post on the subject) they're not saying what I want them to, so I'll have to say it myself.


I'm not one to be particularly worked up over what happened to me in school. My school sucked, but it wasn't until I grew up and ventured out into the world that I realized it was not the normal thing. As it turns out, most schools don't have kids who attack other kids with claw hammers in the hall. Most schools don't have kids who carry huge serrated bread knives in paper towel and scotch tape sheaths. Most high schools don't have kids doing bong hits in class while the teacher is lecturing.


And so on. I probably would have been better off if I'd dropped out but whatever. Let's just say that there was a lot of bullying in my schools.


And I perpetrated some of it. Not a lot, because I was pretty freaking low on the social totem pole, but some, because no matter how low I was, it was just unacceptable for me to be lower that that guy.


There was a bit of churn at the bottom of the social ladder, actually. Victims of one kind or another were always searching for someone to be superior to, for someone they could treat with contempt. For someone to be bullied. And while it was one thing to be pushed around or punched by a HS kid who was on the football team and looked like he was twenty-five years old, it was unacceptable to take a punch from another victim, unacceptable to have someone so low on the social ladder get his foot on your neck.


But whatever. Everything back then was bellum omnium contra omnes. My school. My home life (especially). Even my friends–who I loved and will continue to love, who are fantastic people–was a constant sting of insults and put downs. That's pretty much all we ever said to each other.


I'm going to skip the story about my son in kindergarten because this is getting long. I will say this: Victims of bullying need help. There's no doubt about that. But the bullies need help, too.


I'm not just taking about assholes like me, who made sure three out of every four words I said were some kind of supposedly-funny insult, or the kids who were bullies just so they wouldn't be at the absolute bottom. I'm also not just talking about kids with problems that would make good afternoon specials: kids from broken families, or who have abuse or addiction problems at home.


I'm talking about every bully, even the ones who are athletic, good-looking, and smart, the kids from good families with nice clothes. All of them. Because if a kid, any kid, bullies someone, that kid has a problem. The best way to deal with bullying is to protect the victims and care for the bullies. You have to help them get over their shit so they can live like decent human beings.


Because they're just kids.

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Published on October 14, 2010 13:25
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message 1: by Kristin (new)

Kristin  (MyBookishWays Reviews) Loved this post, Harry...very, very well said!

I don't remember all of my school years being sweetness and light, certainly, but I can honestly say I never personally witnessed some of the cruelty we seem to see so much of today. I think this has more to do with ready access to internet/news around the world then anything else though. I read a story the other day about girls laughing during the funeral of the girl they helped bully into suicide. While I do think that there's something to the phrase "born bad", you also have to wonder what kind of parenting turned out kids this horrid... This kind of sociopathic behavior is alarming, to say the least. I too have a son in Kindergarten, and all we can do is do our best to make them into sensitive girls and boys that don't bully others, and can keep their heads up if they are bullied.


message 2: by Harry (new)

Harry Connolly It's easy to point fingers at parents, but I think the real problem here is that we just don't understand kids all that well. We live with them, yeah, but there are so many cultural assumptions in the way that we can't always see who they are.

How many parents are ready to talk to their kids about bullying, specifically? How many are willing to acknowledge that it feels good to bully people? It feels like power.

Personally, I think things are much better now than they used to be. My school was a DMZ, I'm so not kidding.


message 3: by Kristin (new)

Kristin  (MyBookishWays Reviews) Wow, that bad huh?? I think I lived in a rather tame school district. You're right, it is VERY easy to point fingers at parents, and I really do try not to, but it's HARD not to sometimes. I find I have to think hard, really hard sometimes, to remember what it was like when I was my kids' age. My daughter is almost 12...I'm terrified!

It's funny you should make the comment about bullying feeling good, because they played the episode of Family Guy last night where Peter beats up a neighbor kid, then when the kid tells him he would have done the same thing cause it just feels goood, Peter acknowledges that it did, indeed, feel good. Closer to the truth than most people would like to admit...
And truthfully, there's absolutely no one out there that doesn't talk behind someones back, make fun of others, and snicker at others' shortcomings. It really chaps me when people get righteous about that. We've all done it, and there are a few incidents from my schooldays, that, while not bad at all by comparison, I'm still ashamed of, at age 34!

We absolutely have to be willing to talk honestly, and CANDIDLY to our kids, and be willing to admit that, at the end of the day, we're all human, prone to some serious f-ing up, and also be willing to admit to our own weaknesses.


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