GiantHockeyFan wrote:
nobody would allow me to eat with them, sit on the bus with them or help me. When your whole world turns on you, you develop survival skills..
This. I wasn't allowed to sit down on the bus all throughout junior high. It was awful. Even the school-bus driver wouldn't come to my aid-- I remember getting the impression that she was actually embarrassed by my ineptitude and unwillingness to "stand up for myself", even though I'm a girl and I think usually boys have that problem more often (expected to defend themselves). I remember feeling really betrayed by that--- that an adult would side against me with the other kids. Now when I look back I can see that she was so pathetic that she was actually sucking up to the "cool girls" on the bus after school when waiting for the bus to fill up-- like, asking them about their boyfriends etc. She wanted to be accepted as cool by some junior-high school girls! Sigh.
So yeah-- in junior high for sure I learned to keep my head down and try to be invisible as much as possible. It helped me survive school, but it also had a lasting negative affect on me in other ways.
I do think I'm naturally quite introverted-- even around family and friends I HAVE to have "alone time"-- but not as much as I've made myself to be, for extra safety and comfort.