Home→Forums→Tough Times→Facing Bullying 14 Years Later
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July 17, 2016 at 11:11 am #109853AnonymousInactive
Hi guys, this is my first post here, so thank you for reading. Coincidentally, it is also the first time that I am addressing the fact that I was bullied for almost a decade throughout secondary school by a particular ‘friend’ and others in the group. I am now 26 years old, and was 13 when this began.
As someone that was new to any concept of a friend group I quickly found myself at the mercy of a leader of friends who, over the course of my entire school period, encouraged people to exclude me, physically oppressed me and systematically made me feel worthless through all imaginable forms of exclusion, abuse and psychological games. The worst part perhaps was that this group contains someone I am still friends with, and who also sat through it all, even joining in at times in my abuse. It makes things all the more difficult when the people who are hurting you are the only people that can keep you company.
This is really the first time I have thought about this, and pinpointed it as a reason for so many of my mental issues in recent years, like anxiety, panic attacks and a general feeling of worthlessness. Especially damaging was the fact that I felt ashamed to express emotions, for fear of being mocked, and I generally thought I was a needy person that should puck up and do things alone to get respect.
How wrong I was. I feel my life is shifting now that I am uncovering this, and I am sure people here have felt the same. I would love to know about how you BEGAN to deal with such issues, and what first steps you took. Some questions facing me now are, should I even bring this up with my old friend im still in touch with? should I even still speak to him? how can i rebuild my personality and sense of confidence? The list goes on.
Anyway, i’m just looking for a friendly voice and stories of how people overcame such things. Anyone willing to talk I would love to engage with. Thanks for hearing my story.
July 17, 2016 at 12:20 pm #109878Annah ElizabethParticipantHi, Lucas,
Thank you for the courage to share your story and to heal your heartaches. Your questions are difficult, for the answers will be unique to each and every one of us and for each and every situation we face.I, myself, once spoke up to an adult friend with whom I acquired much personal growth through our personal exchanges. That said, I also endured a number of hurt feelings because she would often resort to name calling and once when I gave her a gift that somehow touched a bad memory for her, she snarled at me “What the hell am I supposed to do with THAT?”
I finally realized how silent I’d been when she was acting in hurtful ways, and when I finally did choose to talk to her about it, she became defensive and didn’t want to accept what she was doing. For me, I chose to allow that friendship to shift. We are still friendly toward one another and I am grateful for all the time we had together, but I no longer choose to spend much time with her. That has been hard in some ways bet very freeing in others.
I have heard of people who, as adults, confronted middle school or high school classmates, who had no recollection of events that were hurtful or some who felt badly about the way they acted toward others. Only you know how your relationship is with your current friend. Has he changed? Is he now acting in supportive and kind ways toward you? If so, he may have matured and not be aware of how his actions impacted you. If he is still acting in hurtful ways, only you can decide which way you want to move forward.
As to how to rebuild your sense of confidence, you do what you are doing: reaching out, researching, and reflecting on the things that you want and those that are important to you. And then you act in loving ways toward yourself.
All my best, Journeyer,
Yours in hope, healing, and happiness,
~Annah ElizabethJuly 17, 2016 at 1:03 pm #109880AnonymousInactiveThanks for your reply Annah, that was helpful. I have not been in contact with the friend group for many, many years now and I do not think I would make an effort to speak to them. However for the person I am in touch with, I think it will be a similar situation to yours in that I maintain good terms but choose to engage with other people.
Anyway thanks again for sharing your thoughts and experiences.July 17, 2016 at 9:00 pm #109906AnonymousGuestDear lucasgreen:
I am still overcoming bullying. The way I do it is by asserting myself, using that skill I did not have and did not practice when bullied. Stand up for yourself in small ways and big ways.. no way is small when it comes to you being assertive, standing tall, rejecting abuse.
Of course, it first took the noticing that someone was mistreating me before I was able to reject it.
anita
July 19, 2016 at 10:51 am #110046AnonymousInactiveHi Anita, thanks for your reply. I am trying to do these things everyday in order to build my self esteem, and prove to myself that I can do the things I was taught that I could not. Thanks for your advice!
July 19, 2016 at 12:04 pm #110050AnonymousGuestDear lucasgreen:
You are welcome. About proving to yourself that you can do the things you were taught you could not- I hope you attempt the smaller things first and give yourself credit for doing those, every thing that builds your confidence, every thing that operates for your well being, however small, is …big.
anita
July 19, 2016 at 7:01 pm #110105MattyParticipantHi Lucasgreen,
As someone that was new to any concept of a friend group I quickly found myself at the mercy of a leader of friends who, over the course of my entire school period, encouraged people to exclude me, physically oppressed me and systematically made me feel worthless through all imaginable forms of exclusion, abuse and psychological games
Also @Annah makes a really good point, that kids at school who bully or call names, may not have viewed it as such, maybe they were just ‘doing’ it rather than being conscious of it. Kids are pretty social and as a result just bandwagon with everyone else. You don’t want to be left out, so you try your darndest is to be ‘in’ rather than out.
How did I begin to move forward? Well… I guess I stopped caring so much, i decided to focus on study and working in high-school. This gave me a drive and purpose. It also made me feel like I was achieving something, at times (actually a good deal of my final years before graduation) i felt superior to others. I was quiet, reserved and kept to myself (or at least tried) and I always felt that when other students would put me down or just say stuff to my face, that I coped by saying to myself that I wasn’t just better than them, they weren’t even in my league. I carried an air of resentment against people like that. I guess that’s why I always looked serious and adults always felt I was too mature. I don’t have this outlook anymore, it was a high-school facade that did it’s job. In hindsight, it didn’t really work. Inevitably, while trying to make a stand by casting myself as separate to others, better than others i voluntarily excluded myself (which caused a bit of mental pain later on in life).
I guess I though it would be a lot easier for me, when i left school, that was it. I disconnected with everyone, in fact i never had facebook until i was 20. I secretly felt ashamed and embarrassed because after all the study, work, money earnt, i was nothing without a social life, without friends. I would sit in the middle of the food courts in malls, by myself actually contemplating why i hadn’t of just ‘gone with it’. Why did i have to be so stubborn. This is how I thought. It didn’t help either that when I got my graduating results, they were far below the average (your results are based on how you perform as a class, not as an individual). It was like all the work, all this time I had tried to ignore and more forward had failed. It took many years to get over this.
What you are going through, is what i went through, your perspective changes. I stopped looking for validation of my own qualities, my own capabilities and sought validation in myself. I stopped dwelling on mistakes i made in the past, and forgave myself. I realised that, in esscense what i had done was exclude myself so that others wouldn’t have the pleasure in doing it to me. And that I have become my own bully. When you are a loner, you cannot be ‘super loner’ since you are still by yourself hahah. But this is how I thought. I began to move forward, by simply moving forward. I guess, i stopped looking through a ‘high-school’ lens, and started seeing myself for me.
I hope this helped,
MAttyJuly 20, 2016 at 6:59 am #110119JoeParticipant@lucasgreen
Thank you for sharing your story. You’re right, there are a lot of people who didn’t really have great experiences at school and some things just trigger not-so-good memories.
A few months ago I was listening to my local radio station about a man who was faced with the prospect of going to his school reunion but he was unsure about whether to go because that would involve coming face to face with somebody who had tormented him, and the thought of going to this reunion brought back so many painful memories for him. A lot of listeners called in with their reunion stories and how they were reunited with their bullies but surprisingly, their former bullies apologised for their behaviour.
I also remember watching a YouTube video about somebody who was bullied at school, and he actually ended up phoning one of his former bullies – not as a means of calling him out on his behaviour or confronting him, but rather to seek some kind of explanation as to why he was tormented. The bully was remorseful, he did say he didn’t hate the person but he just ganged up on this person with his other friends just because he was there to be bullied, because he was “different”, that’s just how it was. I don’t think this was a particularly good excuse for justifying his behaviour but it sounded like that this person had since changed. I think what irked me the most about the former bully was how he thought it wasn’t a big deal for him back then, he wasn’t aware of how horrible he was making this person feel. “It was just a joke, we were just having a laugh, it was just banter…” If I had a pound for every time I heard that from somebody, I’d be well loaded!
I wasn’t exactly popular myself at school – the cool kids were all about rap music, watching the latest reality television shows, wearing the latest Nike Air trainers, blasting their music on the latest mobile phones, having the most friends on MySpace and Grand Theft Auto. They were quite relaxed in their approach to school work and they liked to have a laugh. They would talk and laugh in class about going out the weekend before and getting drunk and stoned at the park. I think I was the complete polar opposite of all that! I only knuckled down with my schoolwork because there was nothing else to do and I just wanted to be done with it, but for some reason this makes a person a teacher’s pet, an apple polisher, or a “keeno” as we like to say in England. Because I wasn’t popular, trendy or outgoing, they would shout “freak”, “weirdo”, “loser”, “emo”, “fat b*****d”, “why don’t you slit your wrists and kill yourself”, “scruffbag” and a variety of other names I best not repeat on here. It hurt being the constant object of ridicule, or made to feel like they were drawing all of their attention on me, going out of their way to make me feel uncomfortable. I wasn’t even going out of my way to “be different” or draw attention to myself, I just wanted to not be noticed (well, actually, I wanted telekinesis after reading Stephen King’s ‘Carrie’ to obliterate them with my mind in excruciatingly painful methods, I was silently twisted and vindictive back then!!!) Looking back, I just attribute this to the fact that there is huge pressure on children and teenagers to conform to what is cool or trendy.
I also remember the torment only ever happening in gangs or packs as well. On their own, the cool kids would just say “hello” and they wouldn’t even try to be mean, they were only ever mean in front of their other friends. Some kind of need to just show off, I guess…
I don’t stay in touch with anybody from school these days but I do hear reports of what they are doing occasionally. Most of them are now parents. I think they had to grow up and take things more seriously when they were faced with these responsibilities – jobs, families etc. If I’m honest, I have no desire to reunite with them – I’m not the same person I was back in school and I don’t think the other’s are the same people either. We have all changed and grown up. I’m not giving any justification for their behaviour towards me but some people just pick on somebody for being different, or just because they are there as an easy target.
The point I’m trying to make here, I guess is that people change – bullying, name-calling, spreading false rumours and abuse is not okay at all and there is no justification for it but after listening to that radio station and realising that people don’t stay the same from when they are at school, it was hard for me to remain bitter or fearful of the other people from school. I’m not saying school hasn’t affected my current outlook on life or that I’m completely over it, but I have to tell myself occasionally that “they were wrong.”
Joe
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