Raph said:
I think that almost everyone has been bullied at one time or another during their childhood. I was bullied a lot and would end up coming home crying to my mother because nobody liked me. Until my father taught me how to fight, it was incessant. It was horrible, but I didn't go to extremes like today's kids. Just within the last 10 years, many kids being bullied have committed suicide over it for God's sake! They have even went as far as live streaming it on Facebook. I don't understand. What is it about today's children that they are willing to end their lives over something so common? I just don't get it.
Social media....persecution with a global audience.
Bullying wasn't relentless in my childhood - isolated playground incidents that could be 'left behind' once you reached the sanctity of home. There was always emotional respite in the form of weekends and holidays to lick your wounds before you had to face another onslaught...
Today's kids emotionally abuse each other through social media - no longer a small schoolyard gathering watching their humiliation but a global audience...trolls piling on until the victim feels a tsunami of hatred towards them.
'Happy slapping' is alive and well in the UK - my friend's daughter recently held down by a teenage boy at a train station whilst his sister took running kicks at her head - all filmed on a mobile phone and circulated throughout the school in a matter of hours.
Verbal bullying was fascile in my childhood - inane taunts and spontaneous moments of violence. This generation knows how to destroy self-confidence and self-worth in their victim through relentless personal attacks that these kids can't escape. It's often the last thing they read at night and the first message that greets them on their phone in the morning.
I blame modern parents to an extent - children largely being babysat by an ipad.
I blame the lack of household dining tables....nah, I'm not kidding!
Families rarely gather and eat together - the kids don't often have a natural opportunity to flag up a problem at school or talk about what's worrying them. I know families who are happy for the kids to scamper downstairs to collect a plate of food and retire to their bedroom to resume an evening on Snap Chat. Simply - these kids are being brought up and moulded by their peer group.
If there were more shared mealtimes, parents could discuss and address issues before they become so serious a child no longer goes to school.
Somehow, there's just not the family structure there to support victims in some cases....