Parent
to Parent
As founder of Act Against
Bullying, helping children affected by bullying at school, I am often
asked the question, ‘What exactly is bullying?’ There are
obviously as many definitions as there are opinions, but one is ‘A
student is being bullied or victimized when he or she is exposed, repeatedly
and over time, to negative actions on the part of one or more other
students.’
The AAB began with my research and writing on the very insidious Exclusion
to Cause Distress,. Best defined as ‘being isolated from the group’
ECD is probably the most practiced form of psychological bullying today,
particularly amongst girls. It is not simply a change of social set;
there’s always a ‘forcing out’ by the bully using
manipulative techniques which affect the popularity of the victim and
reduce their self esteem as a result. Other aspects of this form of
intimidation may be consistent mockery, name-calling, the demeaning
of the individual and his or her family, the passing of socially off-putting
rumours, and so forth. In fact, the various ploys are only limited by
the imagination of the bullies. A powerful tactic, it is likely that
ECD is responsible for the majority of suicides amongst young people
directly attributable to bullying at school.
Children who have been bullied at school become withdrawn and introspective.
If they follow the advice given and ‘tell a teacher’ very
often their situation deteriorates. They then feel like ‘a troublemaker’.
They are most certainly branded as one, even worse, a paranoid troublemaker.
So the best thing, they think, is to keep quiet, go with the flow, keep
in with the crowd. As a reward for their sycophancy and silence the
gang selects another target. For the former victim, the relief of reacceptance
is so great that when the leader dictates ‘Everyone ignore so-and-so’
they join the scheme without a murmur of disapproval. And so the circle
of suspicion keeps spinning.
But what are the consequences of this action? At home the mother of
the new victim is distraught. Unable to sleep, she agonises over the
action to be taken. Bullying carries a stigma, so no one wants to talk
about it. Is she personally to blame for her child’s suffering.
What can she do to make her son or daughter more acceptable. Buy the
latest £50 trainers that they can ill afford? Move house? Should
she approach the school or will that make things worse?
Head teachers have their hands tied behind their back as parents are
often involved. Private schools are rife with ambitious mothers reinforcing
exclusionary tactics to better their childrens’ social positions.
State schools are a multicultural mix with family prejudices being played
out in the classroom. The tragedy is always the child victim, suffering
the cruel and unhappy consequences. Very often the long term casualty
is the bully them self, building a reputation that will one day catch
up with them. One thing is for sure, there are rarely any winners when
bullying at school is involved.
Louise Burfitt-Dons
lbd@actagainstbullying.com
AAB knows the distress
a parent suffers when their child is being bullied. Please email
us if you need our support. We care
about you too.
symptoms
caused by bullying
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