cyberdad wrote:
funeralxempire wrote:
At least I'd hope so because the entire relationship you have changes as the person ceases to be your peer. In this case the person you had the relationship with is still the kid you remember but you're no longer the kid they bullied, you're a grown-ass man who's had lots of time to mature and gain perspective (just like the bully hopefully has if you encounter them again).
I've come across my former schoolyard bullies 20-30 years later and they always act like I was their long lost friend. They all have one thing in common whether you meet male or female bullies from decades before....they all have amnesia. I also find that amnesia in people who were friends with you in school but now pretend they don't know you.
I don't ever tolerate that pattern of behaviour either. I'll bluntly remind people how they treated me but I don't do it with the intention of reheating stale beef, just simply to force people to acknowledge previous actions. I don't become open to their friendship, but I can at least abandon grudges and desires for hostility.
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The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. —Malcolm X
Just a reminder: under international law, an occupying power has no right of self-defense, and those who are occupied have the right and duty to liberate themselves by any means possible.