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When Your Child Is the Bully
Filed under: Bullying, Expert Advice: Big Kids, Expert Advice: Tweens
Is your kid a Scott-Farkus-in-the-making? Credit: (c)MGM, Courtesy of Everett Collection
"My daughter was mean," recalls the New Jersey mom of three.
And with that realization came with a flood of emotions -- confusion, embarrassment, and even shame.
"I was a teacher and a nanny before I had kids, so I thought I had it all figured out. I was ... embarrassed of my daughter, and I definitely felt shame. Here I was this teacher, this nanny with years of experience, and I couldn't even control my 15-month-old."
We hear so often about the victims of bullies, the kids who suffer at the hands of tiny tyrants or teen queens. The media covers the sensational cases, like that of Phoebe Prince, the 15-year-old South Hadley, Mass. student who took her own life after she was taunted mercilessly on Facebook.
But what about your average, garden-variety bully? And what about their parents? For Heidi, living with the knowledge that her child took pleasure in victimizing others was incredibly stressful.
"I felt judged, especially by people who didn't know me or my child," she says. "I left many places crying, for many months."
Those feelings were wholly appropriate, says speaker, author and filmmaker Stacey DeWitt. She is also the founder and chief executive officer of Connect With Kids, an organization that seeks to educate parents on issues like obesity, anorexia, body image, drug use -- and yes, bullying.
DeWill says that, unlike Heidi, many parents of bullies are reluctant to admit that their child has a problem.
"Initially, they don't want to hear it," DeWitt says. "They say, 'That can't possibly be my child!' or "People are overreacting.' But once you point out the pattern of behavior, they do eventually acknowledge that fact."
DeWitt says child-development research shows that bulling by very young children is, in fact, Darwinian.
"This is actually nothing new," she says. "In some ways, it is evolutionary to have this kind of aggressive behavior and it is not uncommon to see it in young children."
What has changed, she says, is that our current "culture of cruelty" rewards those whose bullying ways put them on top. No one remembers who came in fourth place at the Olympics -- everything in modern society is geared toward a cutthroat, competitive lifestyle. This obsession with winning can actually blind parents to the signs that their kid is bullying others.
"I think some parents are proud (of their bullies) and they don't even realize it," DeWitt says. "I don't think in most cases it is ill-intentioned, but I do believe that parents are so consumed with survival in the current, highly competitive socioeconomic market and with their kids being the best and coming out on top. The thing is, when you need to be the best, that means someone else needs to be on the bottom."
The blindness DeWitt points to does seem to exist. We posed the statement, "I feel some pride in my kid when they bully others" on an electronic message board, along with two possible responses: "Sure I do, it's a big bad world out there and someone has to be the winner!" and "Are you crazy? No way!"
While only six percent of parents agreed with the statement, the tone of the debate that ensued is a grownup version of playground fisticuffs.
"Any parent that is proud of this type of behavior needs to be pulled outside and have the [expletive] kicked out of him/her. Eventually their kid will be on the news because one of the kids that he/she bullies will bring a gun to school and blow their [expletive] head off," writes one mother.
While other posters adamantly deny that they would be proud of a bully, some of them are keen on meeting fist with fist.
One woman details an incident in which her child punches another child in the face, and she praises the girl for her actions: "We were at [a playground] several months back and some older boy was climbing all over her, not wanting to wait his turn to go down the slide (He was too big/old to be in the toddler area in the first place). She asked him twice to back off. He did not, she she reared back and punched him hard in the face. THAT, I was proud of."
DeWitt is unfazed by these kinds of reactions, and reminds us that parents are themselves subjected to this kind of "it's either me or you" mentality every day in the workplace. In fact, more and more mothers are finding themselves the victims of bullying -- from other moms.
"You have to remember how competitive the world is right now, and this is something that parents themselves are forced to maneuver through," she says. "We teach our kids that they need to be tough and competitive to look out for themselves. It's cultural."
She points to all aspects of modern life, including, of course, the media. Shows like "American Idol" thrive on the nasty remarks of the judges, and we consume them happily. However, DeWitt is one of the few to point the finger not at the producers of such entertainment, but at us, the consumers.
"It isn't that this kind of show would never have been made in the 1950s, it's that society would not have tolerated this kind of show in the 1950s," she says. "The media is just a mirror of who we are now."
What can parents do? Teach your kids empathy (which is not an innate skill) and role-play often when they appear to be developing the traits of a bully.
That's what Heidi tried to do with her daughter, who is now 8 years old and recently ran her very own fundraiser for the victims of the Haiti earthquake disaster. But the road to empathy and kindness was neither short nor smooth, she says.
"I knew in my mind that it was nothing we were doing to cause her to be a physical kid, who hit, and bit, and pulled hair," Heidi says. "We didn't teach her those things, so in my mind I knew it was just something to work through. But knowing that didn't make it any easier."
"I am proud to say, that now, at almost 9, she is a super great kid," she adds.
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ReaderComments (Page 5 of 14)
3-12-2010 @ 9:24AM
dbrooksy said...In an emasculated world the wrong kind of people push themselves to the top. Tyrany, oppression, slavery, a world of kings, and subjects where the kings rule from a position of vanity and not virture. There are not many places anymore where one can go to find refuge. The family can be a refuge, but it takes male leadership. Its the last remaining hope for this world.
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3-12-2010 @ 9:21AM
Bob said...On this Anti-bully law - I really believe the parents should be blamed and fined. I know its not easy as a parent to raise a child BUT TODAYS parents truly are not putting in 100% as a responsive parents. I mostly hear from a parents the line " We got it tough" - for any parent who claims this line just means to me your not truly a parent and making excuses for your failure to be a parent. First of all who said having kids would be easy in the first place. That's why I think we are now seeing more kids on TV News because the kids are actually controlling thier parents which it should be the other way around. Today parents need to teach thier kids to be more discipline - I don't mean to be a monster to your kids every day! Once in awhile and parents need to explain in detail the reason why discipline is good. You just don't say it once and then leave it alone. You must bring up quite a few times during the week so you can stay on top this subject - also a parent you must show them a TRUE example on discipline and the results that comes out of it. Being a parent is the toughest job in the world but as a parent use must be committed and make sacrifices to be with your child EVERY DAY! I beleive it best for marry couples who are talking about having kids - should talk to a family psychiatrtist about having a chlld - the psychiartist could definitely evaluate for the couple if will be good for them to have a child. Sad to say this but MOST parents are not true parents - they are what we call - WANNA BE'S or another term IMAGE so they can fit in the crowd of people and family that they have a child but truely not so responsive in raising child - this could be ONE of the reason why a child would be a bully BUT even sadder is in this case I see marry couple get DIVORCE because of having a child and financial problems. Really sad to see - I just hope parents today will getthis matter taken care of. I also wanted to say I'm not pointed at ALL parents - they are some who are doing a great job teaching thier kids discipline BUT a GREAT MAJORITY of parents are not.
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3-12-2010 @ 10:55AM
tess said...Bob-fantastic comment, I totally agree.
3-12-2010 @ 9:54AM
Barbara said...Some behavior is inate. I was a tough little girl from almost birth witha terrible temper. I thought it was my upbringing and interaction with older cousins plus I liked to fight. As I got older I did get (High school)over it but I didn't want my child to be like that so...
When my daughter was born, my husband and I gave her nothing but love and kindness. She was the sweetest, smallest little thing you could imagine. I planned on enrolling her in a karate school, just because she was so tiny.
I took her to the Central Park one day, to the playground, She was about two/three. A little boy ran past her and accidently bumped into her and she hauled off and punched him dead in the face(HE WAS BIGGER) I was mortified. She exhibited more aggressive tendencies( I forgot about Karate, Was scared for other kids, In the First grade, her and another little girl liked to play and at lunch time would play- fight with the boys(She was still a tiny little girl) Thought it was fun. She was never a bully, but she never backed down and would face a group of bigger kids to protect another child. Anyway by second grade she stopped fighting boys and became a girl with leadership qualities.
We never believed in hitting her-Ever (Talking, time outs, no specific television show )and she grew up to be a lovely young lady, focused, christian centered, and is now in college.
She was a girl scout for 12 years, she attends Drexel University and I am so Proud of her.
As a Black Family, I didn't grow up with the No hitting Philosophy, but a friend of mine had a daughter, a year older so I had a role model. Her daughter grew up to be a wonderful young lady too.
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3-12-2010 @ 9:27AM
gypsie said...I was on the receiving end of bullying for my entire school career. I became friends with a girl who has Tourrettes. I became picked on for her odd behavior and vulgar outbursts. I was quiet and tried to be kind to everyone. Even those who mercilessly bullied me. I was accused by these students and everyone else in my school for everything from being a slut to being racist. I couldn't do ANYTHING without being picked on. Growing up with a head injury only made it harder. I only found out about a week before graduating high school that these bullies had been torturing me all through school because they were BORED!!!!! BORED AND USED ME FOR THEIR ENTERTAINMENT. I concluded that if they had been kept busy outside of school, they wouldn't have had the time to think of ways to entertain themselves by day, then gloat about it and conspire for the next round by night.
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3-12-2010 @ 9:35AM
Caton said...This mother has experienced what many parents won't admit to. A child cannot be left to their own to make decisions as to how to develop their characters. Education in character development is one of the most essential tools a child can use, seeing as though in every aspect of their life the use of a positive character will always be necessary. As adults, we are or should be our childs strongest influence. I've personally seen children and adults who've been taught The Peaceful Solution Charartcer Education Program go from "clinched fist, I'm going to beat my way through life" attitude to persons with positve character traits and positive leadership skills that will move them and others through life in the right direction. Bullying is and never was a normal part of life and should'nt be accepted as so. Teaching is the key. Knowledge is power. Positive character coupled with knowledge is power that benefits all with no suffering.
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3-12-2010 @ 9:44AM
burrous648 said...some times you have to let the child being bullied take matters in there own hands,show the bully how it feels.my son is six and is very small,so most other kids try to push him around.he tells them to stop or he is going to hurt them.some times it works,some times he has to push back.we have told all of our kids to be nice to everyone,but stick up for your self.
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3-12-2010 @ 10:18AM
3rd force said...So, I guess those two boys who had been bullied all through school at Columbine High School and who had finally retaliated by shooting their fellow students, were simply "standing up for themselves", and that logic made it OK. Right?
3-12-2010 @ 9:37AM
OU812IC? said...To KatieCouric'sNemesis: Let me see if I got this straight. Katie Couric is on NATIONAL TV and YOU are only on line and yet YOU feel you are her nemesis??? WE ARE ALL sure she is feeling challenged now by YOU..You have NOTHING better to do with YOUR time then to get on line and correct people huh? As the saying goes..."GREAT people talk about IDEAS...AVERAGE people talk about THINGS....SMALL people talk about OTHER PEOPLE...WE ALL know where YOU fit in here...To say the least YOUR ego is smothering. Now get back in YOUR cabin and close the door, as WE are ALL sure the stench must be overwhelming...
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3-12-2010 @ 9:38AM
Steve said...So apperantly you think being a bully is OK then because your brothers were? What screwed up thinking that is, There is a big difference between standing up for yourself and being a bully/
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3-12-2010 @ 9:39AM
cmtbvw said...Just another sign of the FUMF phenomenon. (F*** U Me First).
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3-12-2010 @ 11:46AM
Mary Yoder said...This is just plain obsurd. Such talk should not even be a part of a persons vocabulary let alone a child.
3-12-2010 @ 9:44AM
krusty said...These kids that think it's cool to be the "bad-ass" need to remember the biker line about this issue.
" The bad-asses end up dead and the baddest-asses are murderers"
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3-12-2010 @ 9:43AM
tvvues said...I am posting again because it did not go through....
Bullying is a huge problem for kids in every school across the country.
But a large group of kids who are hurt badly by it are those who are shy. I know because I went through it with my child until I found help from an amazing shyness coach who helped me help my child learn better social skills and confidence. You can find out more info on her website at www.dontcallmeshy.com. She does her shyness coaching over the phone so it doesn't matter where you live.
My heart goes out to you and your shy child. Things for my child have gotten a lot better because of this woman's help and I wish your child the best of luck too!
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3-12-2010 @ 9:43AM
Mighy Celt said...If no one tells a child its NOT ok to bite, push, yell at, or pick on others they grow up thinking its fine. Also if the behavior starts out as normal toddler frustration some kids "become" bullies (if not corrected) as a way of dealing with their feelings of insecurity. Yes there are some parents who encourage their kid to be a bully....and then hide their fault by saying "better a bully than the bullied one". Thats bad parenting in my opinion. No one likes the bully but then again the bully may not like it either....they just may not know other ways to cope.
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3-12-2010 @ 12:06PM
Mary Yoder said...Maybe you should learn them the GOLDEN RULE; if you know what it is! DO UNTO OTHER'S AS YOU WOULD HAVE THEM DO UNTO YOU! If they mock you; right then and there do whatever they did to someone else.
3-12-2010 @ 10:15AM
durango78 said...My daughter who is 5 is extremely sweet and sensitive and she has been bullied by her best friend for the last 2 years. Her mom recognizes that her daughter has an issue and is trying to correct it but it breaks my kid's heart b/c everyday she hits her. I always take the approach of telling my daughter that when she hits you, tell her NO, then go play with another kid and let the teacher know. However, I am at the point now to tell her to smack the kid back if she hits you, but feel uneasy about it b/c i don't want to teach my kid bad behavior! arrrggggggggg
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3-12-2010 @ 6:34PM
gradyhoop said...In all of nature certain types of behavior exist. It is our perception of the behavior that invents the problem. In the case of higher forms of life a dominant male is required to draw the line.
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3-12-2010 @ 6:34PM
gradyhoop said...I was the anti-bully. I was big so I drew the line and because I was a Christian I loved and protected the meek. Until I meet a bigger and DAD there was peace and harmony. When the bigger and badder harmed me not even his girl friend would talk to him and I became the hero of all because I maintained the line.
3-12-2010 @ 9:47AM
scott said...whatever happened to the good old fashioned butt whoopin? Im not a promoter of beating children. But what is wrong with a spanking? I think todays society with all of its bs about how it is wrong to spank your child and how a simple timeout is better and more affective is a bunch of crap. what do you do when the child refuses to go to timeout......give him another timeout that he wont do. I was spanked as a child and I know now just like I knew then that everything i did or do has consiquences. If I touch something thats hot...I get burned, and probably wont touch that thing again. as a child if I did something wrong....i got my butt whooped, and probably didnt do it again. And as far as my generation of butt whoopin' goes, I think we are a lot better than the timeout generation of today even at an older age. In my opinion, you can always tell the difference in adults my age and even in the teens these days which ones are/were spanked as a child....they are a heck of a lot more respectful and polite if you ask me,
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