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[personal profile] valis2
I just read a link to a bullying story (link from [livejournal.com profile] atdt1991).

It hit really close to home. I'm sitting here thinking of the ways in which the bullying I experienced in my past echo in the present. It's like a bitter well inside of me that might never run dry. Like the author of this story, I fully expect those I meet to dislike me or not want to talk to me. I am always surprised when people want to be my friend or spend time with me. Going into any new social experience gives me the shakes.

I was a strange girl in elementary school, and I became stranger to my classmates when I changed grade levels, moving past third grade into fourth during the first month of the school year. The kids were older and taller and a little suspicious of me. I'm tall, so eventually I did manage to keep pace with the kids in my grade level, but as far as emotional maturity or social adeptness, I soon lost my footing. I managed to stay afloat through the rest of elementary school, mostly by being strange and hammy, but I made no new friends, and lost the few friendships I'd had because of the change in class.

In retrospect, I was completely unprepared for junior high school. My only sibling was an older sister was nearly seven years older than me and who was strictly forbidden from any sort of rough play or antagonistic behavior. And because I'd had so few friends and was so socially stunted, I was swallowed whole by junior high school. My home life was rule-oriented, so I was ready for rules, and even though I chafed against them, I understood them and wanted to follow them.

It mystified me when people broke rules or did antagonistic things toward each other. I had been taught not to hit or hurt, and to feel empathy toward those who had been hit or hurt, so junior high school was a horrible new world for me. I was introverted and moody, and I thought about strange things and wore strange clothes. I was definitely a target from the start.

What probably made me so entertaining was my over-the-top reactions. I'm sure I was amusing as hell. I gasp pretty loudly, and my face shows my emotions really well, and hurt comes through like a beacon. I'd get angry, too, but just could not get past the Do Not Hit rule, which made my impotent fury all the more entertaining, I'm certain. It was easy to get a rise out of me.

I made a couple friends, including a sad sack I felt sorry for, and it was one of the bitterest flavors in the well when she turned on me and used her mocking of me to secure herself a higher position on the social ladder.

The teasing was unending. The tormentors were sometimes complete strangers--kids I didn't even share a class with and who weren't even friends of the usual bullies. I was tripped. Things were stolen from me. I can even remember which things, all this time later. Gloves. Books. A Swiss army knife which was given to me by my father.

The bus was the worst. When the bell rang, I would grab my things and run, as fast as I could, to the bus, so I could sit behind the bus driver. It lessened their ability to mess with me. I learned this strategy the hard way, after having to tear a huge chunk of my hair out of my head because someone had put gum in it and I couldn't bear the feel of it flopping around. I still wonder what the bus driver thought when she found it on the floor.

The morning ride was much worse, actually, because I was on the second-to-last stop. And no one wanted me to sit next to them. I would get kicked off seats. I'd try to sit down in the aisle and the bus driver would demand I sit down on a seat, but wouldn't help when I was repeatedly kicked off. Once in a while someone would take pity on me, but it wasn't often.

I hated school. My grades suffered. In one class I sat in front of a kid who was a hoodlum, basically, and he made things horrible for me. And he made things horrible for the teacher, too, actually. He must have been held back, because he was at least two years older than me. I went up to the teacher after class one day and asked him if I could punch the hoodlum. The teacher said yes.

The next day, the hoodlum did something nasty, and I nearly did it. But I could not get past the fact that you Do Not Hit. And, staring the hoodlum in the eye, I saw how much worse it could get. How my life could be even more of a living hell than it already was. After class, the teacher rescinded permission to punch him.

I was desperate for any way out of this problem. One of the teachers I confided in just told me to ignore them, that it would go away. So I did. That made it even worse. I would pretend they didn't exist, so when I got tripped I'd just get up again like a robot and keep going. This was even more amusing than me shouting or insulting them, which I'd done a little of up until that point. So yeah, it got worse. And because I'd been given this strategy by a teacher, I couldn't fathom why it wasn't working, and I just kept trying to ignore them.

The last half of my eighth grade was the worst time of my life. I wanted to escape so badly. I withdrew completely. It felt like I was behind a waterfall, like I couldn't feel things properly any longer. I daydreamed about killing myself. I remember going into the ninth grade planning session and not caring, because I didn't think I'd be alive for it. I couldn't even imagine going through another year of that torture. My only problem was that I just couldn't figure out how to kill myself properly. I was terrified that it would go wrong.

My mom and dad were in the midst of their own worries, and I don't think they fully understood what was going on at first. Maybe they still don't, I don't know. I think my mom had been bullied, however, and even though they couldn't afford it, she took action and sent me to a private high school for my ninth grade year.

I will always be grateful for that, but not in the way you might think.

You see, this high school had a marching band. And you had to show up two weeks early for marching band practice (before school even started). So I did.

By the end of the first week, I was getting teased.

By the end of the second week, I was getting bullied.

Not one kid from my junior high school was there.

I had always assumed that it was the bullies. I always assumed it was their fault. That they were evil, sadistic little bastards and that I just needed to get away from them for my life to be perfect. I blamed them for every little evil action they took, for the horrible hopeless life I was living, for the bald patch on my head where I'd yanked out that hair.

When I came home that second weekend, it felt like I was waking up and really seeing myself. And I realized that I wasn't just a victim, I was acting like a victim. My reactions were so comical, my social skills so awful and awkward, and it all conspired to make me a beautiful target.

I spent the entire weekend coming to the realization that it wasn't the bullies, it was me. I had inspired this reaction in them. I had caused my own bullying somehow. They weren't blameless, not by a long shot, but they certainly weren't the full origin of my suffering. I'd made it myself with my own two hands. And it hurt to realize this.

I came to high school and I changed myself. I made myself ham it up, poke fun at things, laugh, anything. I forced myself to talk to people. I consciously became the Oddball, who is funny and goofy and strange. I did end up with a little teasing and a little bullying but it was nothing compared to what I'd gone through before. And by the end of senior year, I had friends (best friends, even) and I was sad to see high school end.

Of course, this is sounding pretty triumphant right now.

Nowadays, though, I see it as a mixed bag. On one hand, I adapted and made myself into someone more socially acceptable in order to protect myself. But on the other, that bitter well still flows inside of me. It's full of poison that I can only dilute a cup at a time, if that.

I went to a party several years ago, and met a bunch of new people. At one point I was introduced to a guy, and he made a crude joke about me within the first few lines of conversation. I think that most people would find him rude and offensive and just blow it off and forget about it within minutes, but I was horrified and stood there, frozen in shock for a split second, scared that even being an adult was no protection against this. Later, I dated a friend of his, who insisted that the guy was a complete sweetheart who would give the shirt off his back to anyone who needed it.

For me, though, it was predator and prey, all over again, looking into the tiger's eye and shrinking in fear. I know--my gloves weren't stolen, I wasn't punched in the stomach in front of people, and I wasn't on the floor with all of my books and papers spread out everywhere with people walking all over them and laughing. But it was enough to take me directly back to that time, to feel it like a jolt of electricity through my spine.

Some things never change. I feel things too deeply, I crave acceptance too much, and I'm scared of other people, of their power. There are things you forget, and things you can't forget. I read the linked entry and could not help but remember feeling those things, and remember being so thoroughly miserable, and I understand only too well what she's talking about.

Unlike the author, though, my bullies were not so easily targeted. It wasn't a trio of identifiable girls. There were lots of them, and I don't remember most of their names, nor even their faces. And if they apologized? I don't know if it would even matter like it did for the author. I don't remember what was said; it's really not even individual events or people. It's about the echoes that I still feel from it, the way that I want to protect myself, how I get scared about going into new social situations. How this sort of thing does make one stronger, in a way, but also leaves one more vulnerable in other ways.

My first job after high school was at a Wal-mart-style store. One of my old tormentors began to work there as part of the cleaning crew, and after a few weeks, I could sense that he was working up to making fun of me. Eventually he did, calling me one of the old names he'd used in junior high school.

I turned to him and said, "Well, at least I'm not a janitor."

You may see this as a triumph, but I do not. You see, standing next to him was a guy who was a sweetheart, who had asked me out for a date at one point. Who was also a janitor.




Um. This is not meant as a Poor Me thing. I am trying to deal with this and understand it better, and it always helps to write it out, and share it. Especially because oftentimes people have similar stories, and to share just makes it feel more bearable. So please don't feel like you need to send me virtual hugs or anything like that. I just want to process this and think about it.
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(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 05:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] schemingreader.livejournal.com
I have been worrying about my kid, who is encountering teasing in first grade. He's too honorable to tell on other children to the teacher. He's too grave and decent and kind to speak up and tell the kid who picks on him the most to be quiet. Hit the other kid? Ha! He won't even tell him to shut up, because shut up is "a bad word."

I don't quite know what to tell him to do. (I did have a few good ideas, but he's in first grade!) I was pretty good at standing up to some kinds of bullying, in exactly the way you learned to do it--edgy wisecracks. But at the same time, like you, I found the behavior shocking. Like, "why are you doing that?" It's because logical people don't see a percentage in being an asshole. My kid is above all, a fan of logic and a prodigy of empathy.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 05:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
I swear, this is what scares me the most about having children--how the hell will I be able to teach them assertiveness when I do not understand it myself? How can I teach them this?

I think I would become a hysterical crazy person if I knew my kids had to go through what I went through. It wasn't that bad, honestly, especially considering horror stories I've heard from other people, but still.

Good luck, sweetie. And if you find strategies that work, I really hope you'll share them with us!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 05:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] schemingreader.livejournal.com
Assertiveness, yes--but I also don't want him to learn to emulate the creepiness of this bad behavior. I'd much rather have him be a decent, good and funny human being as an adult--as you are--than just learn to assert himself. I like his personality.

My sister heard this story and was concerned. She said, "Do you remember how Bobby G. used to bully people in my class?" Of course, I did not. The two boys this bigger kid picked on the most? One is a doctor and one is a rabbi, both happily married with kids. Bobby G.? He's dead. He got messed up with drugs. Bullies are miserable human beings. Not that the choice is between becoming like Bobby G., who was maybe doomed to misery, and these small but successful men.

I want to write a fictionalized version of Bobby's story, some time. his father was a Holocaust survivor and a kosher butcher.
From: [identity profile] little-tristan.livejournal.com
I spend a lot of time wondering how many of us ended up on LJ because this is our life story. I made it through grade school on books and one friend, who was tough and loyal and cool and would kick the shit out of anyone who messed with me. But when her family moved the summer before 6th grade, I was on my own and it turned into--this. Punching, kicking, stealing, hair full of saliva, and twenty adults pointing fingers and telling me it was my fault. I even had the sad sack second-string friend who sold me out for social standing, but she couldn't keep it because no one likes a sell-out.

And being an adult is no protection. My step-daughter looks at me exactly like those kids did, as a crippled nerd to be picked on, and she stole from and hit me, too. Or did before she decided we weren't cool enough to visit anymore. (Maybe it's being from Albuquerque. I was not surprised when I read that.) And some of these people have tried to friend me on FB, only without the apologies, or a note of any kind. They just recognize my name and want more FarmVille neighbors or something. I'm trying hard to accept that they were children, too, and it was 20 years and more ago, but I'm still going to need to see that acknowledgment of wrong-doing before I agree to fertilize their crops or feed their chickens. Because I'm not that cowering victim anymore and I do have a little pride.

I'm glad you found a way to cope, and a bit of self-awareness. I didn't get that until I was in my 20s. But then I didn't care about being liked. I just wanted to be left alone.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 05:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vampireanneke.livejournal.com
You need to find out who is doing it, and talk to those kid's parents. You need to talk to the teacher as she/he most likely knows who is doing it as well. The kid is in first grade, if you don't step in and stop it now, it will just keep getting worse. It's not his battle to fight, you have to step in there and stop it. Reluctance to tell names is not because he's decent and kind, it's most likely out of fear for future retrabution. Kids don't hold to noble sentaments at that age, they understand cause and effect, they tell the effect is more attacks.

That he told you it is happening at all is a Call for help! Regardless of how he phrases it. Don't ignore the call because it's a whisper. He'll just learn to not talk at all. Don't make him fight/assert himself, he's in first grade after all, he is a CHILD, don't try and force him to act like an adult.
Edited Date: 2010-04-20 05:53 pm (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 05:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droxy.livejournal.com
been there and done that. the bus was the absolute worse. There was no escape. parents- utterly useless. Finally learned how to cope by researching what was wrong with me. Learned the whats and hows of what was going on. Doesn't stop it, but I knew. I also got a little perspective...I started clock watching and focusing on the future.

People are horrified when kids took guns to school and used them on fellow students, but there some us in society who know why they did. It's just that back in the 80s we never thought of doing it. I know a gal who dumped me as a friend, because I was "dragging her down" and I remeber this conversation vividly to this day. But I appreciated her directness and I told her I hoped she finds whats she looking for. This same girl wound up committing suicide two months later. Bullying and social dynamics are interesting. In my case what did not kill me made me stronger. But it also made me cynical of people and their "good intentions' and very observant on power motives.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 05:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
Assertiveness, yes--but I also don't want him to learn to emulate the creepiness of this bad behavior. I'd much rather have him be a decent, good and funny human being as an adult--as you are--than just learn to assert himself. I like his personality.

See, for me it's exactly what you're saying--there is a line between assertiveness and...well, selfishness, and jerkish behavior. I find that line difficult to find, and I often stay waaay on the passive side just so I'm not a jerk.

(And thank you--you're so sweet.)

Bullies are miserable human beings. Not that the choice is between becoming like Bobby G., who was maybe doomed to misery, and these small but successful men.

Yeah, I often wonder how the bullies feel about the bullying--whether they ultimately transcend it and feel bad, or if they take a walk into darkness. People really are so variable. I can see that if I had gone a different route, I might have bullied others, myself. I just wonder how schools can stop it--and also, even more troubling, how can anyone stop texted/internet/etc. bullying? That's super frightening. I'm glad it didn't exist when I was a kid.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sassyinkpen.livejournal.com
Wow - I totally could have written this post. We moved right before I started high school so I got a fresh start too, although I didn't have the great realization you did. I was lucky enough to meet some decent kids over the summer so I wasn't entirely alone when I started school.

Then I moved again after HS and got a job at a Burger King where I got bullied all over again - badly. I was never so glad as when I switched stores.

I still get that feeling sometimes too, but I think that thing that's helped me the most is finding out just HOW MANY people have been through the same thing. It wasn't just me - I'm NOT that big a loser.

Thanks for sharing
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
I spend a lot of time wondering how many of us ended up on LJ because this is our life story.

I have a theory about a lot of fandom people, which is they were also part of the outcasts in their schools. Text is so much more comfortable and...safe, in many ways. (Though cyberbullying has shown that, when thwarted face to face, bullying just jumps the fence and goes for the next outlet.)

I even had the sad sack second-string friend who sold me out for social standing, but she couldn't keep it because no one likes a sell-out.

Mine became friends with my only other friend, and they laughed at me together all the time. That was a special level of suck.

And being an adult is no protection.

Yeah, I've been in a few situations where it rears its ugly head, and it sucks. I often ruminate on what makes people bullies and/or victims. I spend even more time on trying to understand that elusive Cool thing, that makes people overlook stupid stuff you do and like you even more, that makes you like catnip to people. I just have no gut instinct for social stuff--I have to piece it all out, and often I do it wrong. ugh.

And when I saw that this story happened in Albuquerque, I did think of you, totally. Rough place, and even rougher for the vulnerable.

I'm glad you found a way to cope, and a bit of self-awareness. I didn't get that until I was in my 20s. But then I didn't care about being liked. I just wanted to be left alone.

I sacrificed my baby personality by trying to burn it at the stake. But I couldn't get rid of it, of course. Mostly I am my outward personality, with this inner strangeness at my core. The inner strangeness would like nothing better than to just sit and play video games in a dark room for the rest of my life. lol.

Anyway, I don't know if I recommend such a radical fix to everyone. It wasn't pleasant, but fortunately I was anesthetized at the time so it didn't hurt as much as it could have.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
been there and done that. the bus was the absolute worse.

It was hellish. Every morning I spent waiting for it in agony. I didn't want to wake up in the morning because I knew I'd have to get on the bus.

I tore a piece of pleather from the seat on my last bus ride. I still have it.

I also got a little perspective...I started clock watching and focusing on the future.

I lacked perspective. I had no idea that it could end--it just seemed to drag on forever.

People are horrified when kids took guns to school and used them on fellow students, but there some us in society who know why they did. It's just that back in the 80s we never thought of doing it.

I had so many elaborate fantasies that my future self would travel back in time and show up and scare the hell out of all of them. At the same time, I was afraid that my future self wouldn't really be that scary. lol.

I know a gal who dumped me as a friend, because I was "dragging her down" and I remeber this conversation vividly to this day. But I appreciated her directness and I told her I hoped she finds whats she looking for. This same girl wound up committing suicide two months later.

Oh god, that's so very awful.

Bullying and social dynamics are interesting. In my case what did not kill me made me stronger. But it also made me cynical of people and their "good intentions' and very observant on power motives.

Yes, they really are fascinating. I am still interested in how bullying works, and how people deal with it or don't deal with it, and what happens to both bullies and the bullied.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
Wow - I totally could have written this post. We moved right before I started high school so I got a fresh start too, although I didn't have the great realization you did. I was lucky enough to meet some decent kids over the summer so I wasn't entirely alone when I started school.

I was so excited about going to the new high school. So very excited. It did turn out to be a very good thing, honestly, and it sounds like it was that for you, too.

Then I moved again after HS and got a job at a Burger King where I got bullied all over again - badly. I was never so glad as when I switched stores.

Wow, that is horrible! I can't even imagine getting bullied in the workplace--that must have been absolutely traumatic.

I still get that feeling sometimes too, but I think that thing that's helped me the most is finding out just HOW MANY people have been through the same thing. It wasn't just me - I'm NOT that big a loser.

Yeah, it's shared between a lot of people. Every adapts in a different way, it seems, but it does feel so much better to know that we're not alone!

Thanks for commenting!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:10 pm (UTC)
ext_9278: Lake McDonald -- Glacier National Park (Gen Hugs)
From: [identity profile] sara-merry99.livejournal.com
The only advice my mother ever gave me when I was being teased and picked on (though I wouldn't call it bullying in my case) was to "rise above it" and "ignore them". Even when I told her that didn't work she never did anything or gave me any other recourse.

Yes, Momma, lesson learned: I can't try to stop or change situations I find difficult, unpleasant, or hateful; I just have to endure until they end (at the whim of other people).

I'm always stunned by the people who look back on high school or jr. high as some golden age in their lives. They *suck*.

Shitty ass lesson.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] schemingreader.livejournal.com
I have already contacted the teacher and asked her to move my child away from this other little boy when they line up for recess. I can also force the issue with a meeting with the other child's parents if I have to do that, and I've been considering it. I'm not neglecting this situation, but he's in first grade and some of the socialization in first grade involves working out how to deal with teasing. Which is a task of childhood.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sassyinkpen.livejournal.com
My mom's advice was "just ignore them, if they can't get a rise out of you they'll quit bothering" also.

You know what happened? I spent a whole detention getting slapped in the head repeatedly while trying to do my homework. By a girl who was rollerskating in circles around the room - man, I wish I'd had the guts to just stick my foot out once...

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
The only advice my mother ever gave me when I was being teased and picked on (though I wouldn't call it bullying in my case) was to "rise above it" and "ignore them". Even when I told her that didn't work she never did anything or gave me any other recourse.

It was really some of the worst advice I have ever received in my life. It made it even more easy for them to pick on me--it turned into an even more amusing and harrowing game. And I didn't understand that I should switch tactics. I really thought that eventually it would just "work."

Yes, Momma, lesson learned: I can't try to stop or change situations I find difficult, unpleasant, or hateful; I just have to endure until they end (at the whim of other people).

Yes, that is the same lesson I heard, and I learned it so well, too. *hugs very tightly* I'm so sorry, sweetie. It does suck.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valis2.livejournal.com
You know what happened? I spent a whole detention getting slapped in the head repeatedly while trying to do my homework. By a girl who was rollerskating in circles around the room - man, I wish I'd had the guts to just stick my foot out once...

That's so absolutely horrible.

For me, it was opening my locker. I'd open it, and someone would come along and slam it shut, and I'd have to open it again. I just put up with it. Sometimes I'd try to actually force my body into the opening, but then, of course, they'd slam it on me, and after those bruises, I wasn't really keen on trying that again.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vampireanneke.livejournal.com
I was the outcast from Kindergarden (for no other reason then I wore glasses). It continued all the way throught highschool. Most kids just did it because it was the accepted status quo. I called it being poisoned against me. Because as I changed grades and schools even, it was like a poison that spread so quickly to the other students. As soon as it was two against one, which side do you think the other students are going to join on?

You should have a meeting with the other child's parents, now before it's to late. Stop the problem before it becomes worse. Maybe it won't, and all you've done is prevent a problem, but ignoring it, and saying it's just part of growing up will not fix anything.

It's easy to say it's just first grade, but take it from someone who knows. It starts there. The formative years.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] little-tristan.livejournal.com
Couldn't we just round up every adult who's ever said that and cattle prod them while they ignore us? It'd make me stop. When my arm got tired.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sassyinkpen.livejournal.com
OMG, that's brilliant!!!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] schemingreader.livejournal.com
I'm sorry that happened to you. You did not deserve it.

There was some point in my childhood where I was a target for teasing, and then I somehow gradually learned how to handle it--all before high school. I am mostly trying to figure out what support to give my child that will empower him to handle this without blaming him for other people's bad behavior.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] little-tristan.livejournal.com
You know, I've said a lot of terrible thing's about my MiL (all true, of course), but when her boys were being bullied, she took care of it. She gave Russ a sock full of nickels, and looked the other way when Mark waylaid his bully after school and and pounded him into the ground with a tree branch. The nickel thing got her called into school, but she said if the principal couldn't control his students in school, how could she? (Mark's bully was so embarrassed about being taken down by an asthmatic kid half his size that he never told who did it.)
From: [identity profile] little-tristan.livejournal.com
Mine became friends with my only other friend, and they laughed at me together all the time. That was a special level of suck.

Oh man, did that bring back a memory. Two girls in high school who were younger than me, Lori and Lora. It was the sickest (non-sexual) threesome ever. They both wanted to be the "best friend" to me and to the other, so it was all competitive and weird. One would want me to team up against the other, or they'd team against me, and during the times when we weren't speaking, they said the awfullest things behind my back. I wished a hundred times that I'd never befriended either of them, but they wouldn't let me go. Probably because I was the only one who could drive.

And you know me. All I wanted was to sit and read all day, and maybe talk about my book with someone. Yeah, that never happened.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jaelle-n-gilla.livejournal.com
That's a really touching story. Touching is not the word I'm looking for. Never mind. I've known kids who were teased and bullied like that and, yes, they always had something - mostly the lack of social skills - that made them a target. And adapting to social rules (even the weird ones of teens) is a process of growing up. We've all done it. You've had the hardest way, but you managed and that's not something you should call a mixed bag. It's what makes you what you are, and you did it out of your own self reflection. That's quite a feat!
Does it sound pathetic when I say I'm proud to know you? But I do!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jaelle-n-gilla.livejournal.com
I like the idea. My method of choice was to hit them as hard as I could the first time they teased. Although I wasn't exactly loved, bullies kept a good distance.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-20 07:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] little-tristan.livejournal.com
That was my husband's approach as a skinny, quiet child. But he was deceptively strong and a little bit crazy. After he went Godzilla on a couple guys, everyone left him alone. Sadly, I was always too crippled to try that. But dude, it sounds like fun.
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