I personally think it's far more widespread than it ever was. No it's not new, and there are many who've suffered from this for years. But it happens much more often and there are FAR more bullies than there used to be. We've been talking about bullying to a greater degree since Columbine, and things have only gotten worse in that time. I wish I knew what the answer was.
My DD11 is very miserable in this, her first year in middles school (6th grade). Every day she is tormented by a lot of different kids. She's been called every name in the book, kicked, shoved, tripped, and even told by a boy he was going to kill her. She is a bit bookish, and ended up on a team with none of her friends, so I think the isolation makes her an easy target.
She has just been devastated. She was so excited to go to middle school, imagining a great social life and chit chat at the lockers. Instead she is scared and miserable. To be stuck in a place where all day every day wherever you go there is someone different telling you you are stupid, ********, ugly, and worse, it is beyond understanding.
I have been in constant touch with the school. They want to end it almost as badly as we do, but these kids are very good at what they do. DD is being coached by teachers and the social worker on how to report and how to be empowered. Teachers are watching more closely and developing a closer relationship with DD. She meets with the social worker and a couple of other girls with the same issue once a week, and the social worker hangs around a lot at lunch and in the halls trying to catch some of the behavior. I think the school is making a great effort. But really, these kids are very good at what they do. And I just don't understand why they won't just leaver her alone.
I personally think it's more accepted (by kids) and more widespread. I think that more kids are more desensitized to meanness, since much of America's favorite pastime is to sit and watch people in situations that bring out the worst in each other. (Survivor, Housewives, Bachelor, etc.), and I include the constant pundit arguing on news channels. I even think that kids have seen so much about bullying on TV, movies, news, that to those so inclined it inspires them. The feeling of power that they get from doing this is the attraction, and the budget cuts and larger class sizes make it impossible to effectively prevent.
I know all this and am doing all I can to stop it, but still it just keeps happening. I've read all the advice I can find online, watched every special there's been lately on TV about bullying, and can't find any good answers. I told the teachers in a note I am getting so frustrated I am feeling a "dad on the bus" moment coming on. I think he was wrong and went way too far, but I do feel all the heartbroken frustration he did.
My DD11 is very miserable in this, her first year in middles school (6th grade). Every day she is tormented by a lot of different kids. She's been called every name in the book, kicked, shoved, tripped, and even told by a boy he was going to kill her. She is a bit bookish, and ended up on a team with none of her friends, so I think the isolation makes her an easy target.
She has just been devastated. She was so excited to go to middle school, imagining a great social life and chit chat at the lockers. Instead she is scared and miserable. To be stuck in a place where all day every day wherever you go there is someone different telling you you are stupid, ********, ugly, and worse, it is beyond understanding.
I have been in constant touch with the school. They want to end it almost as badly as we do, but these kids are very good at what they do. DD is being coached by teachers and the social worker on how to report and how to be empowered. Teachers are watching more closely and developing a closer relationship with DD. She meets with the social worker and a couple of other girls with the same issue once a week, and the social worker hangs around a lot at lunch and in the halls trying to catch some of the behavior. I think the school is making a great effort. But really, these kids are very good at what they do. And I just don't understand why they won't just leaver her alone.
I personally think it's more accepted (by kids) and more widespread. I think that more kids are more desensitized to meanness, since much of America's favorite pastime is to sit and watch people in situations that bring out the worst in each other. (Survivor, Housewives, Bachelor, etc.), and I include the constant pundit arguing on news channels. I even think that kids have seen so much about bullying on TV, movies, news, that to those so inclined it inspires them. The feeling of power that they get from doing this is the attraction, and the budget cuts and larger class sizes make it impossible to effectively prevent.
I know all this and am doing all I can to stop it, but still it just keeps happening. I've read all the advice I can find online, watched every special there's been lately on TV about bullying, and can't find any good answers. I told the teachers in a note I am getting so frustrated I am feeling a "dad on the bus" moment coming on. I think he was wrong and went way too far, but I do feel all the heartbroken frustration he did.
The rest of the group was from fine, upstanding Christian homes with both parents there and all that.
. However, if you build them (your child) up with love, self esteem and courage, they will eventually grow stronger and the words will bounce off like an insect repellent


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