When I was six years old I met Bully Melanie. She wore brown shoes with scuffed up toes, the laces dirty, graying and often untied. Her brown hair was stick straight, flat against the sides of her chunky cheeks. Her squinty brown eyes bored into me, so I avoided making eye contact. Which is probably why I remember so much about her shoes. I heard her coming before I actually caught sight her, the way she kicked the big gray rocks on the playground where we sat to eat lunch. Announcing herself, her arrival.
At lunchtime I perched on an old wooden bench flanking the playground with my friends Elizabeth and Mandy. My metal Wonder Woman lunchbox was open in front of me, its contents carefully packed by my mother. My ice-cold thermos of milk made the other kids laugh (for most of them had juice), but it kept everything else cool, including my favorite egg salad. I could have done without the soggy cream cheese and jelly sandwiches, but Bully Melanie didn't discriminate. She simply sauntered up to me and took what she wanted, holding out her fat hand and oozing a sense of entitlement. Gruff words were exchanged. She smirked knowingly, while her posse waited in the wings, watching her work. Yanking things out of my hands, she set off with my lunch and my self worth tucked neatly under her arm.
She never called me by my name. I don't even know if she knew my name. Only one year older than I, but she seemed so big and tall. As she towered over me, I felt scared and shamed, so I let her take what she wanted. A browning banana here, a sandwich there, sometimes a bag of Doritos or a little red box of Sunmaid raisins. Sometimes all of it. And then Mandy and Elizabeth would kindly hand over bits of their lunches while the tears rolled down my cheeks. They sat speechless, terrified as I when Bully Melanie appeared, but after she left they'd ask me why I let her do it.
Why?
Because she made me feel small.
She scared me.
She was mean.
She didn't take "no" for an answer.
SHE WAS A BULLY.
And where oh where were my teachers when all this was going on?
I don't remember. But they were not there. They did not see.
I had no advocate. No one to step in and come to my rescue.
I was too young and too scared. Too ineffectual.
Bully Melanie: I wonder where you are and if you continue to swoop in and steal things from other people, even now? I wonder if you have children and if you've taught them that's how to get what they want? Or have you stopped the vicious cycle? Do you remember what you did? Do you care? Are you sorry? Sure, a little lunch every other day---maybe not a big deal, but perhaps it's part of the reason I feel compelled to finish what's on my plate all the time; because I'm afraid you're going to appear with your scary eyes and hold out your hand again, waiting.
Bullies are everywhere.
They come in all shapes and sizes, young and old.
The difference now?
I don't bow to bullies.
I have learned how to stand up tall.
I say, "NO, you won't do this," loud and clear.
Have you been bullied? How can we stop the cycle? I worry about sending my children out into this world. I want to teach them how to avoid falling prey to bullies. Please share your thoughts and experiences with me!











42 comments:
Hopefully Bully Melanie is in jail where she is having her lunch stolen from her.
i just saw my bully at the county fair a few weeks ago. she has aged HORRIBLY which made me feel wonderful. as it should.
I was bullied.
My 13-yr-old was and still is bullied. It's a sad fact of life that it happens. I don't know if it CAN be changed, but I know this: I told my son to DEFEND himself. I think if your child stands up to them one good time, that will usually do the trick. Usually.
The only other thing to do is be your child's cheerleader BIG time. Let them know beyond a shadow of a doubt that somebody thinks they are beautiful, good, cool, whatever they are looking for.
It is a sad and difficult situation.
just want you to know (besides how beauiful your post is) that i was wearing my wonder woman t shirt in my vid today. :)
My son is bullied. He is the kid who hides in the cafeteria during football practice so that he won't have to take it anymore, too scared to quit and too scared to continue. Sure, he is odd; he has ADHD, and I don't mean he has a mild case, I mean he has some serious issues that have led to a social alienation and awkwardness that I can't fix for him, and that breaks my heart. I get it; he's different. But why does any kind of different result in attacks?
Bullying sucks.
Thanks for posting on this, Erin.
I know that when I was in school, it didn't matter to administrators whether you were the one being bullied or the bully himself. If you stood up for yourself and managed to make it into a scuffle, you were BOTH punished.
What message does that send? It almost encourages kids who are bullied to shy away and keep quiet.
On the same note, where are the bully's parents?
I think the best way to help the problem is to get bullies help. They are acting out for a reason. Either they were bullied, or abused neglected or don't have the parental care that they truly need.
It's sad, but that's how the cycle progresses.
I'm sorry you were bullied. There was a family of bullies in our neighborhood when I was young and they told me to pull my pants down. I did it. I was too young to realize the shame in it though, but not young enough where I wasn't completely terrified by that family :(
Ahh, yes...I was bullied, too. I remember middle school being a particularly uncomfortable two years - I was shorter than everyone, a year younger than everyone (meaning I was the LAST person in our grade to get boobs...which was a non-stop source of taunting) and - god forbid - smart. I couldn't get through those two years fast enough...but then I got to high school and things got a little bit better. And then I got to college and things got to be pretty amazing.
Now I get to look back on the fact that all of those people who bullied me, made me feel small and like I should be ashamed of my intelligence are all in jail, parents to several kids from several baby-daddies or otherwise drains on society. They went NOWHERE with their lives because they had NOTHING to offer.
Tell your girls to do their best to keep their heads up even when it feels like they can't take it anymore...they'll end up far better people in the long run than those who choose to torment.
I wasn't physically bullied, but I was mean-girl bullied in that lovely way that girls beat each other into the dirt with words.
And yes, I still put up walls because of it.
As a parent, ugh...I don't know. I'm terrified, to tell you the truth.
I guess step one is not to bully our kids. They learn from watching us. (Thanks, Sarah--good point).
Your tale of your own personal bullying experience is haunting. I bet your recollection of this power hungry girl struck a chord in many a reader. Having been bullied more often than I care to remember I felt the same vulnerability and isolation that you did. I suffered my humiliation in silence and when I did tell my mother she would tell me to "toughen up."
It was bad then (1960's)+ and it is gets worse with the advent of endless cyber bullying.
Sadly, bullying is embedded in the mores and values of our culture and is as American as Apple Pie. It starts in our homes, spreads into our neighborhoods, schools, clubs, teams and work places. We need to unite and educate, train, call out, report until we put an end to bullying. As president of a nanny company we are training our nannies to be aware of bullying and how to respond and react.
Thank you for sharing your experience it is a way to begin the dialogue that should concern us all as a community of caring adults.
Oh yeah, i often wonder about the bullies that made fun of me.
i think some of them are still the way they are and probably WILL NEVER change.
IF I hear about anybody bullying my daughters at lunch or any other time, I swear I will go to their school and make a stink.
NO ONE should feel afraid to eat.
NO ONE should feel 2 inches tall.
NO ONE should bully ANYone, period.
EVER.
My high school experience sucked.
I was too afraid of everybody and everything. Didn't want ANYBODY to know who I liked because they would tease me.
Didn't wear ALL the clothes in my closet cause if I did I would get teased.
Didn't do this, didn't do that.
NOW what do I do?
I am living life with no regrets.
Like me or hate me.
I don't care.
Seriously.
Great article.
And Sarah's video hit the nail on the head. sheesh.
Some people.
I hate bullying and what is going on in America right now should fill each and every one of us with shame. No H8. No H8.
I was severely bullied from my 4th through my 8th grade years. I went to a private school in a small town where all the kids were rich and privileged. I was neither of these things. My dad worked himself into the ground to send us there. I was also scrawny and dowdy with absolutely no grace to my gangly frame. I was teased, harassed and laughed at every one of those years. And I hated getting up every morning and going to that school.
I did get the last laugh when we all went to high school and I evolved into a different creature altogether while they stayed mired in that same mean mindset. Not many of them fared too well in life. And I know it's wrong, but I sit here in my happy life and when I do think about those days, I laugh at how poetic justice is often a very delicious thing.
I was bullied a little bit in school. I got through it by trying to do extra things for the bully. Luckily, I went on to middle school and never had to see that girl again.
I had a guy at work the other day try and bully me. A grown ass man. He sent me an email detailing to me what "my job" is. No, he is not my superior or boss. I immediately forwarded it to my boss. Thank God, we are a small company and my boss was more than happy to deal with him for me. How sad is that? A grown ass man still trying to bully to make others feel small and himself more significant. I do not tolerate this behavior for 1 second. My husbands ex-wife bullies me all the time through him and her sick sense of control over us. I used to let it affect me (and secretly it still does - shhh, don't tell), but now I just treat her with the kindness she so desperately craves. I'm trying to love her through it. Because if she pushes me to lash out in anger, well then she won didn't she? That is my prescription for a bully a strong stand and a loving hug.
My brother and I were bullied HORRIBLY by the most disgusting family to ever live.
We still get so mad when we talk about it or see one of the scumbags.
I still want to wring their necks.
I was a very ugly kid and was bullied a fair bit, though I don't think my lunch was ever taken. I often wonder, though, like you, where those bullies are now and what they think of their past behavior, if they even remember it.
Heaven knows I am still plagued with guilt for my merciless bullying of my little bro.
Oh yeah, I got bullied! I think everyone has been bullied in some form at one point of life or another. It's wrong and unfair! Great post!
I was bullied. For years and years.
There was nothing anyone could have done.
I saw one of my bullies while I was waiting in the ER with one of my kids and all those feelings came rushing back.
What to do about it? Always listen to your kids. Instill enough confidence and love in your kid's lives that what one awful person does to them doesn't have much impact.
I was picked on. I remember that. Teased and taunted, but never to the degree of what I"ve been hearing lately.
I learned to just accept that I was made fun of daily for looking different, having an unusual name for the times, having unusual lunches, not speaking english, and that was that.
I just accepted it.
But, it was far worse for my son, and we had to pull him out after the school did nothing, and we began to homeschool then.
It was vicious, and became physical, and no one did anything including the bully's parents.
I have sent a post to ooph.com, who will be publishing it this week. She is running a series on true bully stories.
Things have to stop, no one needs to live this way at a young age.
I think, we would NEVER allow this in the workplace, so WHY is it OK in schools, to children?
Fantastically told, as you always do, Erin...though I"m sorry for the subject, you know?
I went to school with several bullies. Thank God they didn't target me but I was always afraid that they would.
My son goes to Middle School next year and I'm worried about how he will be treated as he isn't the typical jock/redneck that is popular here.
This is a tough subject. Children bully for all sorts of reasons - because they have an unhappy or worse home life, because they themselves feel inadequate or jealous of someone else's popularity or perceived nice life, or sometimes because they are just born bullies (the latter being more rare in young children I think). I experienced bullying twice in my school life, once when very young at 6 like you and again at senior school. Neither time did I tell my mother, I did not have that sort of relationship with her and she was wrapped up in her own issues.
I think more children than not go through some stage of bullying. I only hope that if it happens to my daughter then she will tell me about it. If not dealt with and talked about the effects linger - why I think I to this day maintain a high guard around my emotions, always afraid of getting hurt.
I was bullied once and only ONCE in seventh grade. I came home crying and told my mom all about it. She gave me the BEST advice that I still carry with me to this day and I'm passing on to my son. She told me that there will be people in this world who like me and people who don't just as there are people who I like and don't like. She said to find the people who like me and I like and only pay attention to them. She said not to worry about the ones who didn't like me.
When the bully approached me at school I wasn't scared at all. I thought that she was just one of the people that didn't like me and I didn't like. I would walk away any time she approached me. If she tried to get my attention I would just tell her "I don't really care what you think of me, if you think that you're better than me, that's fine with me. I could careless about you." The beauty of it was, I really didn't care. I had my friends who treated me well and that was all that I needed. Eventually, she realized that she had no power of me and gave up on bullying me. I was no longer an easy target because I was impervious to her.
To this day, if a woman is treating me unkind in any way, I just adopt this attitude. "You mean nothing to me and I could careless about what you think." is a bitter pill to swallow when you're an adult. It gets rid of the riff raff.
This is something I am so fearful of with my little one. Just today at the park a little boy walked up to her and shoved her! His mother was sitting at a chess table talking to her friends. She didn't respond! I thought, this is part of the problem. I also remember the bullies at school. And it's true, they make you feel so...small. Thank you for posting this, I think it's so important for us to discuss and acknowledge that this goes on.
I really think every person goes through both sides of the the mean kid phase. We are all picked on by someone and we all pick on others to some degree. Figuring out how to stand up for myself didn't come from being raised in a utopian world. I had to be bullied a bit to figure out how to be the strong woman I am today. I also will admit to reacting to that bullying by picking on other children to make myself feel better. I was lucky, though. I learned, early on, that picking on the other kids didn't make me feel better: it made me feel WORSE. So I became the one that stood UP to other kids. I became the one who is now so indignant about equality that I will not let injustice lie.
That said, there is definitely a difference between someone picking on you and someone BULLYING you. A perpetual situation that goes on for several days, weeks or years is a really dangerous one. Those are the situations that need intervention for not only the bully but also the victim. Both children need to taught the way to treat others and the way to allow yourself to be treated.
I wasn't bully but I was teased by my cousins from time to time. Even though it wasn't all that bad it hurt. I don't think my daughters were bullied but I know one was called names by the boys in the neighborhood! It is time for parents and teachers to ban together and stop this. I know at the school where I work it is not tolerated. We watch very closely for any signs of bullying and our counselors come to every class and talk to the kids about this terible problem!! All you moms out there...check to see if your counselors are doing this in your elementary schools and even middle school and if not ask why!!!
I was never bullied and never bullied anyone myself so the whole concept is a little crazy to me. Obviously I know it happens, I just can't imagine someone doing that to you. Because it's just SO WRONG.
There's a basic, but good little article in the current Parents magazine about how to protect your child from bullying, as well as a blurb on how to make sure your child is not the bully themselves.
I hope and pray my children never have to go through what you went through Erin and that if they did they would know to come to me. I'm sorry that happened to you. So sorry...
This bully is a disgrace to my name!!! :)
Oh yes I was bullied. For being small. I was always very short and small, and for some reason that made it okay to make me cry. I couldn't do anything about my height. I was shy, which also made me a target. All I wanted was for them to like me. I tried and tried and tried, but from 4th to 8th grade, the same bitch treated me like I was WAY beneath her.
And I heart Sarah's statement.
I don't remember being bullied.
I hope that doesn't mean I WAS the bully.
I like to think I was nice to everyone, and they were nice to me.
I like Fantasyland.
The bully that I remember lived in my street. He was a racist bully and his parents were racists too. He would spew hurtful racist words as I rode my bike past his house. He would laugh hysterically and then step right in the middle of the game that me and my friends were playing.
He bullied us because he knew we were afraid. (My twin sis and I.) The moment we told our older cousin who was "big" and tough what was going on, he said, "Tell me the next time he bullies you." The bullying continued until one day, my cousin appeared out of nowhere and stood up to him. He told him that he would kick his butt if he ever found out that he was even looking our way. He stuttered and stammered and rode off on his bike in a hurry. That was the last time he bullied us.
I think tween and teen girls bully each other constantly with the very dynamic of their relationships. Always catting behind each other's backs and trying to exclude one or the other in the group or make one feel bad about something. And of course, many have it far worse than that. I think surviving the school years should be rewarded with some sort of medal of honor.
I have no experience with bullying, but it breaks my heart to read/hear of kids and teenagers feeling like they have no way out of it and taking their own lives as a result. I am so very much aware that it happens everywhere. I worry about it and pray that as parents, we ACT on it and effectively put a stop to it. I hold out hope for a future where our kids do not need to worry about such things.
This is so powerful on so many levels...the fact that you remember her shoes so vividly...I can see you there, head down, unable to look at your tormenter, handing out choice bits of your lunch. The fact that she maybe didn't even know your name. Why does that somehow make it even worse?
My bully was big and fat, too. Sandy Newman. I'll never forget her. I hope there's a special spot in Hades for her.
I have never been bullied, and neither have my kids, so I feel lucky that way.
It's such a tough thing to fight too because it often comes from the home and if it's being reinforced there, the very people you need to help change the behevior (the parents) are of no help whatsoever.
I was teased, but never quite bullied. I participated in a bullying incident in the third grade and made a little girl cry. I'll always regret that, but it has served as a lesson to me as a parent that even good kids say nasty things sometimes. I make a point to tell my daughter to be nice to everyone. You don't have to be friends with everyone, but you owe them common courtesy.
I think there must be 3 camps of people: the popular, the bullies, and the rest. A couple of years ago, I got sucked into watching "High School Reunion" on Lifetime or Oxygen or something. Anyway...here they are...20 years later and the popular girls are still trying to be popular, the athletic girls still have great bodies, and the bullies are still bullying. It IS a cycle because we teach our children what we know. And if there's one thing a bully knows, it's how to bully someone else. I'm not sure HOW the cycle is stopped because usually bullies are usually very insecure and that only leads to trouble. I think it's fantastic that celebrities and activists are coming to the aid of bullied children. I also think it's devastating that children had to take their own lives before that happened. All we can do is spread the word and try to be there for each and every child. And I'm with The Blogging Goddess...maybe Melanie is in prison...having her lunch (and whatever else) taken from her.
Bullying needs stopped. Sadly, the zero tolerance some schools have don't make much of a difference.
My daughter is only in 3rd grade and I can name a few bullies at that age. It scares me. Sometimes I want to put her in a bubble to protect her from the nastiness that is out there.
I was bullied in the 4th grade by a group of girls that were suppose to be my friends. One day they were super nice to me and the next they ganged up on me. I remember crying so many times in the corner...it was so hard.
I am scared for my kids and hope they never have to go through this. And if they do, I hope they feel comfortable enough to tell me. Its something I would never wish on any child.
I was never bullied by anyone specifically, but there was a clique of girls who had a general dislike for me and it wasn't really cool to be my friend or anything. I was stuck in the same school for almost my entire elementary/middle/high school career and I could never get away from them. It was terrible. I HATED school.
I sometimes see those girls now. I always avoid eye contact because I don't want to even give them the option of speaking to me. Lots of them have kids and I wonder if they are going to grow up to be the 'mean girls' like their moms were. And if their kids are going to pick on mine at school.
One would think (and certainly, hope) that children would "grow out" of the bullying stage. I'm finding that this is entirely untrue. In fact, I believe some may not even come into their own until they are adults and feel more secure.
Some of them were probably even victims of bullies themselves.
This last week, my BIL's best friend stopped by their house for a visit. I had never met the man, but had been told he was a riot and fun to be around. Since they (my sis and BIL) live across the street, it was inevitable that I would meet him at THIS visit.
Meet him, I did. I realized he was a jackhole about 5 minutes into the initial conversation...he loudly started calling my nephew "Twitch."
My 15 yr. old nephew has Tourettes. Nice guy, eh?
Needless to say, we will not be the best of friends. If my BIL chooses to be friends with someone who is so callous and ignorant, that's his choice.
Oh...did I mention that this guy only has 1 leg? The mean part of me wanted to call him "Peg Leg" or "Stumpy"...but realized that would only make me like him.
But still...
Great post Erin! I honestly don't remember if I was bullied, but I do remember being pushed around (mentally) by a few girls who were younger than me and thought their shit didn't stink. This was in High School!
Having two daughters, I worry a lot about bullying, especially since I have seen first hand how snotty little girls can be! This is one of the reasons why we chose a private school for my daughters. There are only 16 children in both my daughters classes, and I know all of them. I'm around the school volunteering, and I also do lunch/recess Mom. My daughter's school also started a new program this year called "Bucket Fillers for Life" which is somewhat of an anti-bullying program!
I used to get picked on up until 7th ot 8th grade, never physically bullied but made fun of and picked on. We didn't have much money until I got older and we had to have free breakfast and lunch and you know how kids are!
I was bullied. When I was four we moved to a new city and I started a new school. I went to that school wearing an eye patch because of my lazy eye. Enter the pirate jokes. I cried every day that year.
In seventh grade I went through the "mean girl" bullying. Cliques and snits and spreading lies and rumors. It was awful. It didn't help that it was a fancy private school and I was definitely the only kid there without designer clothes etc. The next year some of those girls changed schools and that made my life much better.
I think that we have to tell our kids NEVER to back down or bow down to a bully. They have to know that we have their back if something like that happens to them so that they will tell us the first time. I told my parents and they dismissed it as me being dramatic. After a few times of trying to talk to them about it, I gave up.
I also think that we have to tell our children to look out for bullies, and that they should step in if they see someone bullying someone else. Having another kid stand up for you in the midst of being bullied can make a huge difference!
I'm sorry that you lived through bullying. That no one stepped in and protected you. I know that you will protect your daughters.
This makes me feel so sad for you. It's hard to remember sometimes that children who bullied are often being bullied themselves, in one way or another. It would be so interesting to hear the conversation you might have with her now, if you really could contact her.
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