Garbage on Facebook
- pioneer98
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
A parent posted in Facebook about their kid getting bullied at school. The first comment was someone telling them that getting bullied is an opportunity to build resilience. I have not been this furious about a Facebook comment in a long time. I know the victim, and he's friends with my kid. He's a good kid. So that just adds to my anger.
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
One of my friends sons was being bullied and that’s the general approach he took with his son. It’s going to happen and learning to be bigger then it and not letting it get to him. Now that is far different then the attitude that he had with the school board and how the issue was handled, but he thought that not making his son a feel like a victim was important. I don’t know that I’d handle it how the dad did but I can certainly understand him basically wanting to build resilience in his son.
- lukethedrifter
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
It really depends on the kid. And the level of bullying. Some amount of learning not to give a [expletive] what some butthole says is important. I would like to have learned that earlier in life.Diddy wrote:One of my friends sons was being bullied and that’s the general approach he took with his son. It’s going to happen and learning to be bigger then it and not letting it get to him. Now that is far different then the attitude that he had with the school board and how the issue was handled, but he thought that not making his son a feel like a victim was important. I don’t know that I’d handle it how the dad did but I can certainly understand him basically wanting to build resilience in his son.
Sure seems like it could be particularly tough for kids of this era with the 24/7 level of contact they can maintain.
- Joe Shlabotnik
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
I used the All-American approach when I taught my kid what to do when he was bullied at school:Diddy wrote:One of my friends sons was being bullied and that’s the general approach he took with his son. It’s going to happen and learning to be bigger then it and not letting it get to him. Now that is far different then the attitude that he had with the school board and how the issue was handled, but he thought that not making his son a feel like a victim was important. I don’t know that I’d handle it how the dad did but I can certainly understand him basically wanting to build resilience in his son.
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
I don't know why a parent would post about their kid being bullied on FB. What could it possibly accomplish? Raise awareness of bullying,? ... If the bully's parents were FB friend, seems it would be better to address them personally.
Perhaps. It is quite a bit different than adults sharing their #metoo stories.
My kid would despise me for announcing something like this.
Perhaps. It is quite a bit different than adults sharing their #metoo stories.
My kid would despise me for announcing something like this.
- pioneer98
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
Being bullied is not like "a challenge" to overcome or like a "learning experience". There is nothing to be learned from getting bullied. The only possible thing you can learn is that the person doing the bullying is an [expletive] that should be avoided. The other thing you learn from being bullied is that your friends and classmates are chicken [expletive] for not standing up for you and telling the bully to back off. This family now has 2 kids with suicidal thoughts that will be going to counseling. Great life lessons they are learning.
- pioneer98
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
Freed Roger wrote:I don't know why a parent would post about their kid being bullied on FB. What could it possibly accomplish? Raise awareness of bullying,? ... If the bully's parents were FB friend, seems it would be better to address them personally.
Perhaps. It is quite a bit different than adults sharing their #metoo stories.
My kid would despise me for announcing something like this.
It probably was ill-advised to post it to Facebook. This family is kind of a mess and has a ton of problems. Some of their problems are self-inflicted, but certainly not all.
- pioneer98
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
Since we are in the Rants & Raves section, here is my rant on bullying. My view is largely influenced by my own experience and this really, really good article that I think I posted a long time ago in a different thread. I'll give you the Cliff Notes version.
Bullying can only happen in places where kids/people are held captive, and when the bully has an "audience". This is why it only happens in places like school, prisons and less often, workplaces. If people are free to walk away, that's what they will do almost every time someone tries to bully them.
The goal of the bully is to get a reaction from the victim in front of the audience. If the victim reacts, then the bully holds that up as proof that the victim was whiny and deserved to be bullied. The only options for the victim are:
1) Leave the situation entirely (as I said above, almost always not an option)
2) Don't react at all and let the bully continue to torture you. Good luck.
3) Fight back with even greater force to get the bully to back off. This will likely result in both the bully and the victim getting punished. And the bullying may resume after a while.
4) Complain to the parents, teacher or whoever has higher authority. The authority may view the victim as the problem, since they are the one complaining. If they are taken seriously, it may give the victim a temporary break. After a time, the bullying will likely resume, though, and may be even more intense.
That's it. Those are the only choices the victim has. None of the choices are very good. The absolute best outcome is if the "audience" witnessing the bullying (the other students in this case) were to tell the bully to stop. Once the bully sees that what they are doing is not gaining them any status, they will almost always stop (unless they are truly a sadistic sociopath). Sadly, the victim has no control over whether their fellow students will stand up for them like that. This is why bullying says way more about the other students witnessing the bullying than it does about the victim. Teach your kids to take a stand if they see someone getting bullied. Most of the time, the bully will not turn someone who speaks up into a victim, but it is a risk. It takes courage.
Bullying happens less often in bigger schools where there are multiple "cliques". If you can find a decent size clique where you fit in, then your friends will likely stand up for you and you will be safe. This is what I experienced in high school. Bullying did happen in high school, but it happened FAR more often in my small private grade school. At the small grade school there were only 2 cliques - the cool kids bullied the nerds. So you had better hope you were accepted into the cool kids group. I was initially in the cool kids group. Then I saw them bully people and I told them to stop. Since it was just me saying that, they didn't stop. If more people than me had spoken up, I think they would have stopped. So after that I was basically a loner - there were like 3 of us that didn't fit into either group. The kids in my grade largely left me alone, but my clique of 3 was not enough to stop bullying from kids in higher grades.
I used to blame these traumatic experiences from my childhood for shaping me into the sensitive, introverted, loner person that I am. I am 100% sure those incidents did not help me at all. I was in my 30s before I started to grasp that I would probably be the same person, for the most part, had I not been bullied. My anger, rage and shame over those incidents was totally justified, though. What happened was BS. I did not learn a single life lesson from being bullied. All it did was cause deep emotional scars that took years to heal. That's it. There is no upside.
Bullying can only happen in places where kids/people are held captive, and when the bully has an "audience". This is why it only happens in places like school, prisons and less often, workplaces. If people are free to walk away, that's what they will do almost every time someone tries to bully them.
The goal of the bully is to get a reaction from the victim in front of the audience. If the victim reacts, then the bully holds that up as proof that the victim was whiny and deserved to be bullied. The only options for the victim are:
1) Leave the situation entirely (as I said above, almost always not an option)
2) Don't react at all and let the bully continue to torture you. Good luck.
3) Fight back with even greater force to get the bully to back off. This will likely result in both the bully and the victim getting punished. And the bullying may resume after a while.
4) Complain to the parents, teacher or whoever has higher authority. The authority may view the victim as the problem, since they are the one complaining. If they are taken seriously, it may give the victim a temporary break. After a time, the bullying will likely resume, though, and may be even more intense.
That's it. Those are the only choices the victim has. None of the choices are very good. The absolute best outcome is if the "audience" witnessing the bullying (the other students in this case) were to tell the bully to stop. Once the bully sees that what they are doing is not gaining them any status, they will almost always stop (unless they are truly a sadistic sociopath). Sadly, the victim has no control over whether their fellow students will stand up for them like that. This is why bullying says way more about the other students witnessing the bullying than it does about the victim. Teach your kids to take a stand if they see someone getting bullied. Most of the time, the bully will not turn someone who speaks up into a victim, but it is a risk. It takes courage.
Bullying happens less often in bigger schools where there are multiple "cliques". If you can find a decent size clique where you fit in, then your friends will likely stand up for you and you will be safe. This is what I experienced in high school. Bullying did happen in high school, but it happened FAR more often in my small private grade school. At the small grade school there were only 2 cliques - the cool kids bullied the nerds. So you had better hope you were accepted into the cool kids group. I was initially in the cool kids group. Then I saw them bully people and I told them to stop. Since it was just me saying that, they didn't stop. If more people than me had spoken up, I think they would have stopped. So after that I was basically a loner - there were like 3 of us that didn't fit into either group. The kids in my grade largely left me alone, but my clique of 3 was not enough to stop bullying from kids in higher grades.
I used to blame these traumatic experiences from my childhood for shaping me into the sensitive, introverted, loner person that I am. I am 100% sure those incidents did not help me at all. I was in my 30s before I started to grasp that I would probably be the same person, for the most part, had I not been bullied. My anger, rage and shame over those incidents was totally justified, though. What happened was BS. I did not learn a single life lesson from being bullied. All it did was cause deep emotional scars that took years to heal. That's it. There is no upside.
- pioneer98
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
Oh yeah one thing I left out is: another option is to try to approach the bully privately to tell them to stop. I did that with one of the guys that was bullying me. He laughed in my face. That's something you never forget. So I don't think that works, either, because, they aren't really bullying you because of anything you did. It's not about you. It's about them - they are bullying you to try to gain status. They may not even really hate their victim. The victim is just a means to an end.
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Re: Garbage on Facebook
I say this dead serious and you’ll probably mock it, but what you describe is pretty much how it is whenever I post in politics. I pretty much just stay away and let you all do your thing, I would post more over there but like you said I’ll just “walk away” instead of post.