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Grammar Geek
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26 Nov 2015, 11:14 am

There was a time in 6th grade when I was walking home, some bullies started following me and started kicking me and swinging tree branches at me. I tried to run, but because of my gait, I couldn't run fast enough. I yelled for help to a girl I saw ahead of me, but she just turned back to look and hurried on forward. Why on earth would somebody do that when a person was obviously getting beaten? I was almost angrier at her than I was at the bullies. Almost.



zkydz
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26 Nov 2015, 11:57 am

Grammar Geek wrote:
....but she just turned back to look and hurried on forward. Why on earth would somebody do that when a person was obviously getting beaten?

My thought would be fear. Maybe she was just as much, if not more, scared as you were.


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goatfish57
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27 Nov 2015, 6:40 am

zkydz wrote:
Grammar Geek wrote:
....but she just turned back to look and hurried on forward. Why on earth would somebody do that when a person was obviously getting beaten?

My thought would be fear. Maybe she was just as much, if not more, scared as you were.


Excellent point


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Falloy
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27 Nov 2015, 7:45 am

I was ridiculed relentlessly in secondary school and in my early adulthood, mostly for my appearance. Like a couple of posters above when I tried to defend myself I usually came off worse with authority.

I am still badly damaged by the experience. I have been diagnosed with body dysmorphia and I find it hard to trust anyone. I'm afraid that I still have a very adolescent mindset and I assume (probably unfairly) that other adults do too. I am afraid that if I make the slightest social slip up I will be set upon and torn to pieces. I have nightmares about these experiences most nights.

I'm seeing mental health services now but to be honest my case co-ordinator isn't a great deal of help. She tells me that I need to think differently and feel different about myself but I can't just change what I think about myself by force of will alone. I desperately want to move on but I don't know how.

I have been given a place on an Occupational Therapy Lifestyle Redesign course which starts next week. I am questioning how useful it will be (I started a thread on this issue). I have argued that the course will be a very artificial environment where it will be much easier for me to reach out to other people because I will know that these people will have social problems themselves and should therefore be more understanding. Tt will alos be a "closed" environment of 12 people who won't really have the opportunity to behave in the ways I would normally fear (by talking and laughing about me behind my back and so on).



Starfoxx
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27 Nov 2015, 5:11 pm

Lockheart wrote:
Starfoxx wrote:
Well I'm getting help now from a counsellor because I'm still thinking in the same way towards people as I did when I got bullied and that was more than 10 years ago.


This is at least part of my problem. When I'm around new people or people I don't know very well I immediately go on guard, expecting that they will act negatively toward me in some way. It's a subconscious, ingrained reaction that I'm not fully aware of. That's making it damned difficult to let people into my life. It's like I'm a wild animal that needs taming. It takes time and a lot of evidence of kindness from a person before I'll start letting my guard down - more effort than most are willing to put in, and why should they anyway?

Instead of assuming that all people want to attack me until proven otherwise, I think I have to come at it from the opposite direction: that most people who have matured to adulthood have good intentions.

Do you think the counselling is helping you, Starfoxx? Are you managing to defeat the attitudes that make you dysfunctional around people, and if so, what are you finding is most effective in achieving this?

It's helping so far. Most of it is realising what my emotions are and that the situation is now different. Mostly it's my own feelings of being vulnerable and angry that's the problem because the students are not harming me. In fact one of them is very kind to me even though I wasn't giving my best impression of myself.

Also the councellor has helped me to realise i can talk with the other students since i can do it well in other settings and that she doesnt think im strange. Its just me who thinks that others think im strange lol.

Another very helpful thing is if I pretend I am in a different setting, not at college and focus on small tasks what I want to acheive, then it's like I know how to act and it becomes easier. Then I find I can do the small tasks so them I'm more confident.

I must conciously work on this often because if I don't my old ways of thinking return.



Starfoxx
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27 Nov 2015, 5:17 pm

I wish I could stop anyone from being bullied.

When I was being bullied at 12 there was going to be a fight; some students brought in knives but I think it was just to scare me. I was going to stay and it thought that if the killed me in the fight it would be fine because I'd be a martyr, and then it will be in the news and all the surrounding schools would hear about it, then no student would bully anyone again.

I didn't stay though, I texted and family member to get me out. I planned on going back to the school but didn't. I moved house far far away. I felt like a coward for years though because I ran away instead of let them kill me lol.

Do you guys think I'm dumb for that? :oops:



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27 Nov 2015, 5:36 pm

Starfoxx wrote:
I felt like a coward for years though because I ran away instead of let them kill me lol.

Do you guys think I'm dumb for that? :oops:


Abslutely not! It's perhaps the only sane thing to do and I would have done the same. Don't blame yourself for it but be proud for doing the right thing despite it feeling, perhaps, humiliating.


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kraftiekortie
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27 Nov 2015, 5:45 pm

Nope...you did a very intelligent thing.

Not only could you have been beaten up, you could have been arrested (if the cops believed the bullies). You might have had a juvenile record.



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27 Nov 2015, 7:19 pm

There are two examples, though they might not be bullying.

1. I wear a pair of radio earmuffs, predominantly in the hallways. Kids always give me a weird look when they pass by, like a(n) alien has attended the school.

2. I was wearing a pair of radio earmuffs in homeroom. Then some girl came and up and asked me, "what are those?" (Not the vine). Then some other kid who was popular in my grade, who was talking to the girl who asked me about my earmuffs asked me "do you have to wear those?" He sounded like he had a bit of dissatisfaction in his voice.


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kraftiekortie
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27 Nov 2015, 7:53 pm

Tell the other kids that you feel comfortable listening to music with those earmuffs. That's all they have to know. You don't have to tell them anything else.



Lockheart
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27 Nov 2015, 9:48 pm

Thanks Starfoxx. :)