Tag Archives: swearing

Bully For You!

FarkusCry, cry for me crybaby! Cry!

BULLY (n.)
1530s, originally “sweetheart,” applied to either sex, from Dutch ‘boel,’ “lover; brother,” probably a diminutive of Middle Dutch ‘broeder’ meaning “brother.”

We’ve come a long way, baby.  Just not in the right direction.

This weekend, my daughter was the victim of bullying.  I’m not talking about your garden-variety meanness here; the kid in question called her a fucking bitch, fuck face, told her she was a ‘ho,‘ proceeded to hit her with a stick and then pushed her into a tree.  This all happened at the end of my street.

He’s eight years old.  And in her class at school.

I have mixed feelings about the situation.  I have a very headstrong daughter, and when he continued to call her names, she continually went back to tell him to stop, though the older girls she was with asked her repeatedly to just come along with them.  I spoke to my girl about this, and told her that her friends had been correct; they should have either come straight to me at the onset or found another known adult to help them.  As it turns out, another parent who lives closer to the end of the crescent had heard the commotion and went out to investigate.  Witnessing the abuse, she approached the group of boys and berated them for their behaviour.  Emma’s attacker ran off, but the others stayed.  One of the boys, frightened by this unknown adult, called his parents, who arrived within a few minutes.

The three girls ran back to my house to tell me what had happened.  I immediately took them back to the park and had them play on the climber while I went over to find out what I could.  By the time I arrived, however, three parents from my street were standing in the park facing off with the one child’s parents. I approached the group, and after a few minutes of listening to the adults shout at each other, I interrupted and said to the mother, “Hello.  My name is Erin.  I’m the mother of the girl who was bullied here today, and I’m hoping we can talk.” At which point I reached out my hand to shake hers.

I got this:

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Not gonna happen.

 

She was really on a tear, and extraordinarily defensive.  I understand that no parent wants to hear that their child might not be the angel they believe them to be, however even after listening to the adult and several kids who had witnessed it, she steadfastly refused to believe her child had been involved.  I told her, calmly, that I had three girls who backed up each others’ accounts, to which she responded, “So where is the girl?  Where is the girl this happened to?  Is she here?”  I replied that yes, my daughter was present, however there were a few things I wanted to clarify as adults beforehand, and I had instructed her to play on the climber.  I said, “You have to understand that my eight-year-old is distressed right now, and it would upset her if she were to be asked to come and speak to an angry adult she doesn’t know.”  To which she responded, “Why do you make it sound like her age is important?  My son is eight, too, so what? I keep hearing these stories from everyone else.  I want to talk to her, now!”

Ahem.  Let me pause, here.  My policy when in the midst of an emotional power keg is to transform into a Zen Master.  I speak calmly, quietly and unexcitedly.  I smile sincerely.  I employ body language that allows the other person to understand I’m truly listening to them.  However, at this point, when the woman repeatedly referred to my recently-traumatized daughter as ‘she’ and ‘her’ and ‘the girl,’ and for some reason believed I would actually make my kid face off with a raving, batshit-crazy adult, I realized I wasn’t in the least interested in continuing the conversation.  Fortuitously, she was distracted by a baited comment from someone else, and I moved away.

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Buh-bye!

Over the next few minutes I spoke to the remaining kids and got their side of the story.  They admitted there was bad language, though they weren’t in agreement as to whether or not my daughter was hit with a stick.  They asserted my daughter continually went back and engaged the boy, until she was called away by her older playmates.

This morning before school began, I had a meeting with the school principal to apprise him of the situation.  He agreed that he would speak to the teacher, and ensure that at no time of day would my daughter and the boy be left alone without adult supervision.  He will be speaking to one of the girls my daughter was with, who, as a school lunch monitor, has apparently witnessed the boy bullying Em and others in the past.  He will get the names of the other boys who were present.  He will take the boy to a different classroom for lunchtimes (when no teacher is present).  He will be calling the boy’s parents.  All these things I agree with, but I have to say I’m still concerned with potential run-ins on the playground and in our neighborhood.  What to do other than reiterate to my girl that in the event she cannot avoid this boy and he bullies her again, she needs to either a) walk away, b) run away c) run away and get an adult, pronto?

I have this inkling that 30+ years ago, this would have been handled differently.  I’m quite sure the school wouldn’t have become involved, and that I’d be speaking directly to the boy’s parents.  Thing is, in this world of BureaucracySpeak, I find myself out of my element, because my common sense reaction is no longer necessarily the most efficacious route to resolution.

What would YOU do?

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Dunno.

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Vociferation

vo·cif·er·ate  tr. & intr.v.vo·cif·er·at·ed, vo·cif·er·at·ing, vo·cif·er·ates

To utter (something) or cry out loudly and vehemently, especially in protest.

~Here there be swearing~

Consider y’self warned.  Arr.

 

It’s rant day, apparently.  Not a full moon, for those lunar-minded people, I checked already.  But it’s goin’ around today.  Good for me, though, ‘coz I got my next subject handed to me on a platter.

I was going to start right off affirming that I know everyone enjoys a good rant…but then I realized that I happen to really enjoy ranting, and ranting often; perhaps not all of y’all do.  For me, it might have something to do with constantly being told to be quiet as a child (I was passionate and precocious, so sue me), maybe it’s my unique way of railing against injustices of all kinds, but when all is said and done, I think I love it because it’s cathartic.  Having a good ol,’ down home, bile-extracting enema makes me feel better.

Now, there are many righteous things out there to get one’s dander up, but I’m not addressing socially conscious reasons here.  I’m talking about the Things That Piss You Off Royally.  The manias that, no matter how you try, you can’t let go until you tell someone, preferably uncensored and loudly.  It doesn’t have to be the perpetrator of said Thing (though that does add a perverse and wonderful pleasure to it).  I have plenty of friends who’ve lent their ears to my soap boxing, and I’m thankful for ’em.

I’ll get us started, shall I?  Okay.  I’m at Enter Retail Establishment Name here.  I’m at the far end of a rack of clothing.  Some chick will inevitably start looking on the same rack, two feet ahead of me, moving toward me in the opposite direction.  What the fuck?  Can your stegosaurus-sized intellect not see that in about ten seconds we’re going to meet in the middle?  Gad!  I’m a veritable magnet for these women.

Then there’s run-of-the-mill manners.  You know, I drink and cuss and a whole bunch of stuff that mortifies my mother, but I know my social manners and mind my p’s and q’s.  So just try to imagine my ire when I’m in line at the grocery store and someone pushes past without uttering a simple ‘pardon me.’  I like to steel my body sometimes (if it’s not a senior), so that when they attempt the shove-by, they hit a brick wall.  Even better is when they stand in my peripheral vision, snorting and pawing the ground with impatience, thinking that I should somehow psychically pick up that they’re waiting to pass by.  Well, screw it.  You can’t utter two little words, then my periphery does not register you.  And if they get irritable enough, and try the shove-by mentioned above, I will, in a clear and carrying voice to all within earshot, say, “If you’d said EXCUSE ME, I would have moved!”  I have no issues with embarrassing the fatuous.

Feet shufflers.  Gonna kill the feet shufflers.  A buddy of mind specified flip-flop wearers, but then I’ve always been more of a generalist.  A lot of the time it’s teenagers, oozing ennui as they are wont to do, but many times it’s just lazy-ass grown-ups who don’t care if they suck the life out of you and everyone else with their laggardly s-l-i-d-e CLOP, s-l-i-d-e CLOP.  Pick up your fucking feet, epsilon!

Clerks that can’t make change without a calculator.  Y’know, it’s basic math.  Learn it.  If the bill is $4.57, and I give you $10.07, you shouldn’t need three minutes and a piece of paper.  Kill me.

I could also easily do away with at least fifty percent of the parents who deliver their offspring to my kids’ (Catholic) school each morning.  These people live their lives as though there’s a secret and special page dedicated to them in the Biblical urtext that states “I-Shall-Park-Where-I-Please-Because-My-Issue-Has-Been-Chosen.”   Which roughly translates to mean that, while I’m jockeying for a spot, these half-wits put it in park wherever they damn well please, making a total clusterfuck of the parking lot.  Additionally, you have to practically sideswipe the other minivans in order to get out at the end of the day.  I was gonna make a sign that stated, “Thou Shalt Let Other Drivers In,” but I’ve already caused some waves at the school and it’d just be taken down by the custodian, anyway.  Gotta pick yer battles.

So.  There’s a few of mine, and lo and behold, I feel lighter just having written it all out.  Thanks for reading.  Send me some of yours, too, eh?  Just don’t ask me to give a lesson on their/there/they’re or it’s/its and so on.  I’ll insult too many of my friends.

(Psst – there’s a link to The Oatmeal article “10 Words You Need To Stop Misspelling” here – send it to the offenders!)

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