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Confessions of a Childhood Bully
Filed under: Siblings, Bullying, Opinions, Relationships, Behavior, Behavior: Toddlers & Preschoolers, Behavior: Big Kids
Do bullying wounds ever heal? Illustration by Christopher Healy
I rarely dared to hurt her physically, not because she was younger and painfully thin, but because what she lacked in strength she made up for in ferociousness. When she was a toddler, I'd impulsively slap or pinch her and keep walking -- until the time I felt her teeth sink into my back. From then on, I kept my distance.
Instead, I assaulted her with words, calling her a mistake, mutant, slob, loser. I glared at her across the dinner table, or pretended she wasn't there as I talked to my parents and brothers, everyone but her. I snorted in contempt when she brought up her achievements in kindergarten, and laughed when she shared a bad day. She stayed silent as our mother gave her meaningful looks, as if to say, "Remember what we talked about." Mom repeatedly ordered me to stop being nasty and leave her alone, to no avail. I was bursting with irrational hatred.
Now I read articles about bullying and cringe. Victims I have never met reopen decades-old memories of my little sister, my scapegoat. Together, their awful helplessness weighs me down like a load of bricks; it kicks me in the gut and knocks the air out of me. I fantasize about saving just one child from a bully, as if to wipe my own slate clean.
But my sympathy also extends, guiltily, to the perpetrators. I wonder if someone is insulting and domineering those kids, too, or if they have witnessed someone they love being tormented. Will anyone even think to investigate? I imagine staging an intervention and holding a mirror to a bully's seething insides. But after he faces the awful truth, then what? I've treated the symptom, not the disease. There's no happy ending to that scenario.
I know now that when I bullied my sister, I was fighting somebody else. She was an arbitrary enemy on whom I would practice my revenge. My real target was a babysitter, an adult relative who frequently abused me verbally. Although I stood up for myself and talked back, it had no effect.
My sister reacted to my tongue lashings the way I wished my harasser would've. Her silence was my reward. After I hurt her, I would feel energized and hopeful, like I could take on any threat. But in that moment of relief, a nagging voice whispered that my sister didn't deserve such treatment any more than I did. Unable to handle the guilt, I would quickly rationalize my behavior: "My sister made me feel like this. She did deserve it."
Today, we live on opposite coasts and see each other once a year or so. I shower her young daughter with gifts. I try to talk to my sister about the past and forge a closer relationship. Once or twice she's confided in me about weathering tough times as an adult, but it's been several years since we really connected. Her poker face reveals nothing to me of her feelings or opinions. Our mother says that's just the way she is.
I hope my mother is wrong. I want to believe my sister is guarded only around me. I can't bear to think she is aloof with strangers and close friends alike, and that I helped make her that way.
My sister enjoys watching her only child play tea party with her stuffed animals. At 5, my niece is happy and self-sufficient and fearless.
My sister turned out stronger than her bully. She treats others the way she should have been treated, not the way she was treated by me. I'm proud of her. And, I am truly sorry.
Jo Parente is the ParentDish nom de plume, a pen name, used by our editorial team when we want to spill our dirty little secrets but still keep our dignity, and families, intact.
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ReaderComments (Page 6 of 9)
10-29-2010 @ 5:56PM
Meg said...This is a very sad story. You will never be someone good in your sister's life no matter how hard you try now. It is too late. I know that because I went through what your sister id.
I was bullied by my two brothers for many years, emotionally and physically. Coming from a country where a woman does not have much value, my mother did nothing to stop and supported everything my brothers did. I had to make a decision if I was going to be abused by them for the rest of my teenage years and one day . when I was 12 years of age, my oldest brother came to beat me, I pulled up a knife and stabbed his leg. The physical abuse stopped but the emotional one continued. Then at 24 years of age I left Brazil to come to the US and I was glad they were out of my life. I avoided to see them and talk to them each time I had to go to see my mother. At 48 now I found out I had been depressed most of my life. The best thing you can do to your sister, is to leave her alone and be out of her life. Now that I have a wonderful husband, who I could give the love I always wanted to give and I look back, I see two man who never had a happy relationship in their lives. One of my brothers, did got married but always made sure he treated his wife like less than a human being and also his two children. The oldest brother was never able to find anyone meaninful in his life and became a drug addicted. I have been married to a man for the last 20 years have a wonderful daughter and I make sure that I counsel her enough so she will never be abused by a man or by anyone else.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:23PM
Lowell said...Your dad or mom should have beat your behind till you couldn't sit
down for a week, I know this day and age you can't whip your kid
because old woman that should be home washing her dishes will
turn you in. I will whip my grand son every time he needs it and you can kiss where i can't. I am not politially correct.
Reply
10-29-2010 @ 5:21PM
cynthia said...my sister always teased me when i was younger and still to this day is still a person i will not get along with. the way she treats me and the way she lies and talk down about me and my son and husband. what nerve she has to do that. She doesnt have a right too do this. shes not perfect either.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:23PM
howoli said...Jo - Thank you for writing this story. I was the little sister to two older brothers. The only thing I ever knew I did wrong was being born. The behaviors you described your sister developing as she grew into an adult are identical to mine. It is a defense mechanism and I don't know about her, but I certainly use it with everyone. We cannot change our past or the security systems we develop because of them. But I appreciate your words. If my brothers came to me today and said the things you did, I would give them a second chance. It wouldn't make us close, or friends, but it would be a start.
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11-01-2010 @ 12:19PM
Adele Roberson said...clay said...
growing up I bullied my sister and brothers because they bullied me. it's called growing up. so STFU and learn to deal with something you bunch of losers!
**********
I suspect it is really you who are the loser.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:25PM
millie said...And you are exactly the kind of person who will pass on, and approve of, such rotten bullying attitudes to your own children if you have any. I hope you don't. And, if you do, I pity them.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:30PM
millie said...The comment above this post, written by me, was posted in this location in error. It was meant to be a reply to Clay's earlier post!
10-29-2010 @ 5:49PM
Millie said...Good for you for realizing how you hurt your sister and wanting to acknowledge this and make amends to her. It isn't easy when we have to face ourselves and see our self in a negative and bad way and even less easy when we confront that side and admit it to others. Most people don't want to hear excuses or reasons legitimate or not. They just want to hear I'm sorry, I had no right and I was completely in the wrong. You also can't be responsible for how the she accepts your apology or judges the sincerity of it. After that it would be in your action whether that was to respect her wishes to be left alone or to slowly regain her trust, give her the respect as a person she never had from you and hold to it. I don't know if she got this before the blog or how she feels about it, but hopefully for both of your sakes she can forgive you if she hasn't already and you will forgive you. To keep reliving it isn't healthy for either of you. Then you both can move on and grow as better people from this.
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10-29-2010 @ 7:49PM
millie said...I am Millie, and i did not write the about post! Did AOL allow two posters to use the name Millie?? That's NOT supposed to happen!!
10-30-2010 @ 4:32AM
millie said...Ohhh! I get it! Capital "M" vs small "m". I see that now!
I still don't like it! :-(
10-29-2010 @ 5:33PM
Blair said...So now you've grown up and you feel guilty. How good...for you? What about your sister? All those years of her life that she will never get back..that she could have been a happier person, but you destroyed it.
Can you imagine the things she thought of herself since her "sister" thought her to be such a mistake. Can you imagine the misery she must have felt while thinking "I shouldn't be here" " I am a mistake" "I am nothing"..etc.
Perhaps even right now she still feels some of that because those words never go away. There is nothing that you could possibly do to make up for that, and a lame old excuse many years later - an excuse brought about by "other" cases of bullying that you have heard of...is really more for you than for her. You want to feel sorry, you want to ease your guilt, you want to "make it better so that you feel better."
Thank goodness she was able to have a child and protect her from the likes of you. She probably even has a fear about having another child because of what she experienced.
Anyway, I hope you eventually find some way to ease your conscience.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:38PM
P said...Jo - don't apologizeto us, apologize to your sister. You wrote that you have "tried" to talk to her about it. I bet you only tried to get absolution. You might feel better if next time you see her, find a quiet moment and tell her you know what you did, it doesn't matter why, you know it was wrong, and you are very sorry and regret it every day of your life. You can ask her to try to forgive you, and you can commit to forever trying to partially make it up to her. Don't expect anything from her, and live your life now how you see you should. That's the best you can do.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:35PM
Rita said...The Mother let this go on for years? The older kid should have had some serious consequences, especially that it was a pattern. In the old days a beating would have been in order. Now at least take away something the kid really, really likes for awhile and keep doing it each time the bullying occurs. Do it till his room is empty. See how he likes sleeping on the floor of any empty room for a week.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:37PM
jd said...Tears stream down my face as I read these comments,after reading the dreaful story of the bully girl. I'm so sorry for the pain you all have suffer under the bullies,be it ,from family members or kids. Forgiveness is a great healer,but no,you will never forget what was done to you. I was bullied as a child by my 5 brothes and my mother,who thought her boys were angels. I was tortured and thrown out a window,breaking my front teeth. When my father tried to diciplined the animals,mommy dearest,turned against him as well. When she was old and dying,guess who took care of her until she passed. But I forgave her and my brothers as well.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:37PM
bullied said...Sorry, fella, you don't deserve any forgiveness. I hope you continue to suffer.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:38PM
Dolly said...I was the youngest in a family of four children. My brother who was three years older than me, always bullied me. As a child, I had black and blue marks from his punching me. Whatever it was, it was always my fault. He couldn't stand me, his little sister, it never stopped, it went on to our adulthood. We haven't spoken in over 20 years and I'm grateful that I don't have to hear his obnoxious digs any longer. He felt I was my mothers' spoiled brat, I wouldn't have minded if that were true, but it wasn't the case...
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10-30-2010 @ 1:38PM
cheryl said...you were a true douche bag!!!!!
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10-29-2010 @ 5:48PM
Mo said...A lot of pain, relived and held onto. Some of the comments posted here are in the lines of bullying and meanness toward the writer and the perpetrator of their childhood moments of misery and other posters. Its curious how coming from a place of insecurity or pain can make a person want to lash out onto another much like their original offender did to them, yet they can't see it perpetuate or believe it is justified.
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10-29-2010 @ 5:59PM
Gene LeGrand said...Kids that are bullies usually have parents that are bullies.
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10-29-2010 @ 6:00PM
Melinda said...So, her sister doesn't open up to her? And she hopes it is only her any not everyone? Well, a little too late. Years of abuse like this take their toll and really can't be undone. Too bad the parents didn't stand up to the bully. The bully is a coward by not signing her name and publicly acknowledging it to her sister. I think the "confession" is just part of her job and not heart-felt. After all, bullying is a major topic these days. So she's cashing in on it rather than facing the music.
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