LibraryLady
Emeritus
I'm a little hesitant about starting a new thread about bullying. However, it is a subject about which I am so interested in and have a lot of emotional investment in. My last venture was sidetracked, so I'd like to start fresh and in a more specific way.
There is a new term out there, "bullycide," the act of bullying another person until they commit suicide. Whether or not suicide is the outcome the bully is seeking, it applies. I first heard the term last week on a judge show, of all places.
The show led me to this Web site as well.
There have been arguments made on this forum that the victims of bullying only need to stand up for themselves and the problem will be solved. I believe it is more complicated than that. I speak as a past victim of bullying, in junior high school (age 13) and in my family. Unless the "standing up" is done in an effective way, it can actually exacerbate the problem, rather than solving it, and most victims, especially the children, are not educated about and certainly do not know instinctively how to deal with it effectively.
Often, the victim is somehow different than the majority, perceived as gay, atheist, or otherwise not the "norm."
We are a community, a community of skeptics. Is there something that we as a group can do to help alleviate this problem? If the answer is no, what should we be doing as individuals? Or is this not an issue we should deal with at all? I am open to that answer.
I would like to hear thoughts about this. I know it is an emotional issue for some of us.
There is a new term out there, "bullycide," the act of bullying another person until they commit suicide. Whether or not suicide is the outcome the bully is seeking, it applies. I first heard the term last week on a judge show, of all places.
The show led me to this Web site as well.
There have been arguments made on this forum that the victims of bullying only need to stand up for themselves and the problem will be solved. I believe it is more complicated than that. I speak as a past victim of bullying, in junior high school (age 13) and in my family. Unless the "standing up" is done in an effective way, it can actually exacerbate the problem, rather than solving it, and most victims, especially the children, are not educated about and certainly do not know instinctively how to deal with it effectively.
Often, the victim is somehow different than the majority, perceived as gay, atheist, or otherwise not the "norm."
We are a community, a community of skeptics. Is there something that we as a group can do to help alleviate this problem? If the answer is no, what should we be doing as individuals? Or is this not an issue we should deal with at all? I am open to that answer.
I would like to hear thoughts about this. I know it is an emotional issue for some of us.