Bullying is a Social Disease

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I just ran across an article about parents who received a multi-million dollar settlement with their daughter’s school. The parents claimed they had complained often about the constant bullying of their daughter in school and on her phone and social media. They called the cell phone “a lethal weapon” and said the school didn’t do enough to protect their daughter, who committed suicide in 2017 because of the abuse.

https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/31/us/new-jersey-school-bullying-suicide-settlement/index.html

I’m among many who were bullied in school. In those days, we didn’t have cell phones. Still we had groups of thugs who pretty much ostracized those they wished to “other”, pick on, shun, physically attack, shame, and more, like stabbing with pencils. We were the smallest kids in the class, easy marks. We were smart, kind, and vulnerable, so we had to be taken down by the bully and his or her helpers (lieutenants, as they are still called, those who did and still do the boss’s bidding).

Some were afraid to speak up, but I complained not just for my sake but for others. Do you know what the teachers said? They called me a “tattle tale” and told me to grow thicker skin. I found no support, empathy, or sympathy in school. NONE! The bullies had a way to blame me for their abuse. Sound familiar? Victim shaming?

If it hadn’t been for my mother, holding me when I cried, I think I would have killed myself. If my parents talked with the school, I don’t recall. All I know is that I felt alone and vulnerable, not just in class but on the playground, where I faced unprovoked physical, mental, and emotional attacks frequently by gangs of boys and gangs of girls.

We have to stop saying, “Kids are kids”, “boys will be boys”, “buck up”, “grow thicker skin”, and “stop being a cry baby” by adults, who are bullying with these words.

What I see on display in our culture today is continuing foul play by bullies, who stereotype, ostracize, single out, threaten, demean, dominate, manipulate, attack, and the list goes on. Bullying begins in the home and continues in schools, at work places, on social media, and in politics, just to name a few places. And the victims are to blame. This use of projection is a “strong man’s/ bully’s” tactic to control the victims and lieutenants, who know what will happen to them if they are disobedient. Their need to “belong and be praised” overrides the effects on the victims.

How can we address the issue of bullying at home and in schools to begin with? How can we teach empathy, kindness, and love? The adolescent suicide rates from bullying are on the rise. How can we help our children who are suffering constant abuse online and in schools?

Here is one resource with sections on cyber bullying, laws and help for schools and children.

https://www.stopbullying.gov/

The link to the CNN article has information on suicide prevention. The rise in child suicide is staggering.

Our children are our future. How can we help both the victims and the bullies? Why do children bully? What about adults who bully? All of these questions must be addressed if we wish to stop the cycle of violence caused by bullying.

Copyright © 2023 Barbara Harris Leonhard

All Rights Reserved

Barbara is the best-selling author of Three-Penny Memories: A Poetic Memoir (EIF- Experiments in Fiction, 2022). A poem from this collection was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2022. Also, on Spillwords, Barbara was voted Author of the Month of October 2021, nominated Author of the Year for 2021, and recognized as a Spillwords Socialite of the Year in 2021. In November 2022, she became Editor for MasticadoresUSA. Barbara is a Netter-Go Getter. She enjoys bringing writers together at Zoom open mics and readings.

Facebook: Barbara Harris Leonhard /barbara.leonhard; Instagram: @meelosmom123

12 responses to “Bullying is a Social Disease”

  1. gabychops Avatar

    I think parents need to play a greater role in influencing their children that life is a gift not to be wasted, that world is so beautiful one lifetime is not enough to see all that nature created or humans have done, such as ancient monuments, cathedrals, temples or synagogs and others.
    If there is physical violence, police should be told, otherwise, just smile sweetly
    and walk away.

    Joanna

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      I agree. Active involvement is their children’s lives is so important. Then I think of parents stressed by the economy and need more than one job. Single parents. Mental illness and many other factors that cause problems at home. Life is so complicated.

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Maryanne Avatar

      Yes, but if a child is attacked in school, they have to fight back to save their lives. It happened to me, and I ended up hurting a bully badly in order to not be hurt myself. I was small, but the adrenaline kicked in.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Meelosmom Avatar

        I also won a bloody battle with a bully in school. She tore my blouse off, in fact. Later that evening, there came a knock on the door. The girl’s mother and my bully came to apologize and give me a new blouse.

        Like

  2. Liz Gauffreau Avatar

    I couldn’t agree more, Barbara. There is no excuse for condoning bullying behavior of any kind by anyone. However, take a look at the people representing this country in Congress and how some of them behave, heckling a sitting president as he’s making a state of the union address, to take just one example. These are our role models??

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      Yes, Liz! I totally agree! Enabled bullies end up as dangers to us all.

      Liked by 2 people

  3. Dawn Pisturino Avatar

    When I worked with troubled adolescents, bullying was the most common cause of suicidal thoughts and attempts. Parents always complained that the schools weren’t doing enough, and they felt powerless. My personal position is that parents should get their kids out of the public school system, period. The well-being of our children has to come first.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      It’s no wonder people home school. And now the mass shootings. It’s traumatizing.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Dawn Pisturino Avatar

        Indeed!

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Maryanne Avatar

    Excellent piece! I too was bullied in the 1970s growing up. I was shy and small; like you said “an easy target.” Interesting, I never thought of killing myself. I somehow knew that when school ended my life would be better; and of course it was.
    Though back in those days I could “hide” on weekends and school vacations. Nowadays with phones and internet, there is no escape, and I have the greatest compassion for the families of young children who commit suicide. It’s absolutely criminal.
    We need to stop “normalizing” bullying and call these kids out as mentally ill and get help for them–stopping them in their tracks. It’s not normal to pick on others, to hurt others, to destroy others. It’s abnormal. Bullies should not be allowed in a school with other children. It’s not kids being kids, it’s barbaric.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      I agree! But I’ll go further and say that sometimes the bullies are abused at home or have role models. Their parents are also bullies. It’s a social disorder, for sure, because social media gives them a buffer to hide behind, and victims are traumatized all the more. The suicides are tragic. I’m so sorry that you were targeted. What got me is that the teachers called me a tattle tale for reporting the bullying I endured. Isn’t that appalling!

      Like

  5. Bullies Kill – Extraordinary Sunshine Weaver Avatar

    […] Bullying is a Social Disease […]

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