ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Depression

Will your child die of Bullycide?

Author : Dianne James
Many thanks to Brenda for her courage and conviction and permission to use Jared's story for this article. Please read Jared's story at the end of this article, and visit the website dedicated to ending this needless cruelty. This is an ongoing problem throughout the world. It needs to stop.



I've tried my entire life not to hate people, to avoid the bitterness that comes with hatred and prejudice. There is one group of individuals that I could very nearly hate, though, and those are bullies. When I was a child, I had probably more than my share of bullies, due, in part to my small stature and the fact that we moved a lot. Always being the new kid has its special problems, and the new kid is like a bullseye to a school bully, because a new kid hasn't had the time to make friends and build alliances. They're out there on their own, until they do.



I can remember when I was in grade school, and the new kid, being a bull's eye for girl and boy bullies alike. The girls would taunt me on the playground, threaten to cut my hair, exclude me or run away from me, saying cruel things. One particular day, I was about at the end of my rope with these abusers, having sat through an entire morning of having spitballs thrown across the classroom when the teacher would be turned writing on the board. I had already been kicked very hard, on the tailbone by a boy bully that day. When the bell rang and they all left, headed for the cafeteria, I stayed in my seat and cried. The teacher came over and tried to ascertain the problem, by I was inconsolable at this point. The straw had broken the camel's back. I had not talked to anyone about the things happening at school, not teachers, not even my parents. I would not stop crying, so the teacher brought the principal into the room. He talked to me, and calmed me down enough to get me to go with him and personally have lunch with him in the cafeteria. Just him and me. Those kids must've realized how much trouble they could be in, and began approaching our table with their desserts and food from their trays. I thought, trying to look good to that principal. I doubt if he was fooled, but the bullying stopped, at that school anyway. I didn't make friends there before we moved again, because I had no interest in befriending people who would treat me that way.



In other schools I encountered different versions of bullying. I look back now, and realize that I must have had some strength, to never tell on them. Sometimes, the bullying gets worse if you tell. In one school the senior class heard about the cruelty of a group of girls I had hung around with, and threatened them. One senior (I was a freshman) told me, "there's something wrong with this class, they're just the meanest bunch of kids." I silently agreed, and befriended another group of girls who were very nice. But then we moved again...



We moved to another town, in the middle of a terrible time with racial unrest and violence. I heard that a cheerleader had been shot in the face, so I decided I wasn't going to public school any more. My parents didn't fight me on it, I was fourteen then, and I was homeschooled from then on. This article is about children and teens who commit suicide as a result of being bullied. The one thing I had going for me was thinking, "I can get through this," and my faith in God. My family belief was that if you commit suicide, you couldn't ask forgiveness, and you've taken a life (your own), and therefore you would not go to heaven. Hey, it worked for me.



I can remember, at one particular school, while at home, one day, I discovered a bunch of books on the martial arts, Ju-Jitsu, that an uncle had left at our house. I was fascinated by it, and read every one of them. The illustrations showed how you could defend yourself, and even put an attacker's eyes out, break their eardrums, and many other useful things to a bullied child. I was only ten, then, and had no one to practice with. The Ju-Jitsu defense idea slowly faded from my arsenal, and it's just as well- violence begets violence. I excelled in my classes that year, and discovered the saying that I would hear much later, as an adult, "The best way to get even is to be a success" was true.



Most of the schools I attended harbored just a few bullies, and most of the student body was decent. It's just that the new kid makes a good target. They weren't all like the worst town I can remember.



What bullies do



Calling another names, putting them down

Cruelty: excluding the child, and recruiting others to do the same

Taunting and constantly teasing

Ignoring the person, diminishing their importance

Threatening behavior, and singly or group intimidation

Damaging another's belongings, with no chagrin

Taking their books, hat, other items that belong to another

Making another do silly, embarassing things to be "included"

Physical harm, hitting, pulling hair, tripping another



The types of bullies



Some of the indicators of an adult bully



Can be male or female, fellow employee or manager, husband, wife, or parent

Makes mountains out of molehills, in order to control another

Unreasonable/rigid management style, his way or the highway

Destroys staff moral, later "feels bad"

Now more apt to use learned cruelty through verbalization- aiming for "pushing the buttons" by using intimate knowledge to hurt another

Sabotages the work of another

Micro-manages

Still makes cruel comments and put-downs

Uses jokes to target, saying, "I was just joking"

Was a bully or was bullied in school



Imagine this (from www.jaredstory.com, used by permission)

"Imagine these things happening in our workplace. Imagine being harassed and humiliated day in and day out. Imagine being shoved in the hallways or knocked in the head--never knowing when the perpetrator will strike again. Imagine sitting quietly, eating your lunch, and being knocked from your chair. Just imagine that as your head hits the floor, you go in and out of consciousness, as you feel blow after blow, to your head and face. Imagine being told that if you ever defend yourself--you will be fired--but your attackers are allowed back the next day or the next week--to do it all over again.



"Hard to imagine, isn't it? How absurd to think that any business in the United States would operate in that fashion and stay in business. Yet, in the business of public education, we are telling our children to expect it and accept it. The reality is that others took Brandon's life long before he ended his pain. Brandon was courageous. He fought a valiant battle, enduring all these things--until he lost all hope. Just imagine." Cathy, Brandon's mom, from www.jaredstory.com


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





After years of being bullied, herself, the author is testament to the fact that we can endure almost anything. Please visit www.jaredstory.com and let's put an end to the senseless misery and death caused by bullies.

Dianne James has written for newspapers, radio, television, and now for her own MeanderMagazine.com for more than 27 years. She serves as publisher and editor-in-chief of the online magazine located online at: www.meandermagazine.com & Meander Radio. In addition to being a writer, she is a voice-over artist, and owner of a production company producing music jingles and radio advertising, and she serves as a marketing consultant for area businesses.

More on Dianne's background can be found in Meander Magazine's Gallery 2, and her writing can be found in many sections of the magazine. Sections include International and World News, Business, Garden, Health, Spirit, Pets, Auto, Food, Earth, Music, Movies, Over 40, Art, Galleries, and more.





Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Wellbutrin For Depression: When It's More Than Just The Blues
  2. Vagus Nerve Stimulation as a Treatment for Depression to be Launched in May
  3. How Is Your Anxiety Today?
  4. How Do You Know if You Have Manic-Depression
  5. Depression: Escape Your Mental Prison
  6. Do You Think You Have Depression?
  7. Aromatherapy and Depression
  8. FDA Deems Vagus Nerve Therapy Approvable as a Treatment for Depression
  9. Depression and Procrastination: Twins in the Job Search
  10. What’s The Latest on Suicide Risk and Antidepressants For Children?
  11. Recognizing Depression’s Warning Signs
  12. Depression: What It Is and What You Can Do About It
  13. 10 Simple Coping Strategies When a Family Member Has Clinical Depression
  14. Depression: Bringing Yourself Down
  15. Depression Treatment: Depression Would Be Second Largest Illness by 2010!
  16. Vagus Nerve Stimulation and Depression
  17. A Look at the Different Depression and Anxiety Medications
  18. Know the Signs of Depression and Improve Your Life
  19. Adult Men and Women Who Suffer From Chronic Depression
  20. St Johns Wort and Depression
  21. Is it ADHD or is it Depression?
  22. ADHD and Depression -- More Common Than Thought
  23. Depression in Teenagers: Now What Can We Do?
  24. The Patient's Guide to Vagus Nerve Stimulation and Depression
  25. New Treatment for Chronic Depression
More related feeds
Will your child die of Bullycide?
Imagine being shoved in the hallways or knocked in the head–never knowing when the perpetrator will strike again. Imagine sitting quietly, eating your lunch, and being knocked from your chair. Just imagine that as your head hits the ...

Will your child die of Bullycide?
Many thanks to Brenda for her courage and conviction and permission to use Jareds story for this article. Please read Jareds story at the end of this article, and visit the website dedicated to ending this needless cruelty. ...

School Bullies
School Bullies Her fear of the bullies compounded the stress of studying for her GCSEs and she started to suffer from severe alopecia, or hair loss What guidance do you give your child for dealing with bullies? Did your child tell you ...

sudden hair loss woman
Patients often die in late sudden hair loss woman childhood suddenhair loss woman sydden hair loss woman and adulthood. Each chapter is readable and dispenses with long shelf lives. They can realize that anything that is obscene, ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved