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You love being a mom but get overwhelmed, lost and resentful by all the parenting responsibilities. Listen as life coach, teacher and parent educator, Torie Henderson, answers common parenting dilemmas from hard working Supermoms. Are you exhausted from working hard all day but still feel like you haven’t accomplished anything? Do you want to feel calm, energized and in control? Then this podcast is for you.
Episodes
Monday Jun 24, 2019
How can I protect my kid from a bully?
Monday Jun 24, 2019
Monday Jun 24, 2019
Today's Question:
"My 9 year old daughter was bullied all year by the same boy. I brought my concerns to the teacher multiple times and told the yard duty to keep an eye on her at recess. On the last day of school he purposely pushed her down while they were standing in line and knee got all banged up. When I came to pick her up, the teacher said she fell and banged her knee but that she was fine. She was NOT FINE! She needed support! And why was he even allowed to stand next to her in line? The teacher knew this punk ass kid had been picking on her all year. I am livid!
I talked to the principal and she was trying to defend him saying he has behavior issues and the counselor was working with him. Um, NO. The teacher knew what was going on and still made her stand next to him in line. I'm so upset. I'm at the school all the time volunteering. My daughter hides behind me whenever she sees him, she's terrified. I'm trying my best not to go crazy on them but this is not ok.
School is out for summer but I'm worried about this repeating next year. How can I ensure this student is not in her class? I want to help her feel safe but I don't trust the school to look out for her. How can I protect my daughter from this bully when the school won't?" Allison
Parent Educator Answer:
I'm so sorry you've had to deal with this Allison. When I first started working as a parent educator (18 years ago?) no one talked about bullying. Slowly, people started talking, and boy did it spread like wildfire! Every American Idol contestant has been bullied in school. Educators made efforts to bully-proof their schools. Anti-bullying campaigns raised awareness. This problem is taken much more seriously now than in the past.
Because this term gets used so much, I think it would be helpful to define it. Bullying is the use of coercion and force to abuse and intimidate. In order to be considered bullying the behavior must include:
- repetition
- an intentional act to hurt or harm
- an imbalance of power
It sounds like your daughter has been exposed to some repetitive behaviors this year. We don't know if the boy's intention was to hurt your daughter. He could have been mad that she was walking too slow, or annoyed that she was in his way. It could be he was going to push whoever was nearby and your daughter was an easy target.
It seems like this shouldn't be important because the fact remains your daughter got hurt, she is scared of him, and the teacher hasn't been able to protect her. It is important because the word bullying is often misused. Sometimes, it's just mean behavior. For example, in the last podcast, Andria wrote in about how her daughter tells girls she's not their friend any more and gives them the cold shoulder. It would not be surprising, in this day and age, for this hurt girl to claim "bullying."
The third criteria, the imbalance of power, is important to take a look at. It sounds like your daughter and this boy are the same age. If your daughter is in a minority race, religion, sexual orientation, then there is an imbalance of social power. If there is a significant size difference or she is disabled in some way, there can be a physical imbalance of power.
If there is no external imbalance of power but just a perceived one, where he thinks he can pick on her because she's an easy target, then it may just be mean behavior.
Whether it's real bullying or just mean behavior, finding ways for the victim to feel powerful is the most important thing.
Here are some ways to support your daughter so that you and she feel powerful:
- Talk to your daughter about things the teacher or yard duty could do to help her feel safe. We can't make him "be nice to her" and the teacher can't be expected to protect her from him all the time. Would she feel better if he switched seats or classrooms? Could she ask friends to stick by her side at recess? Encourage her to problem solve and ask for what she wants.
- Teach her to use powerful words with authority figures to get the attention of adults. Words like harassment, abuse, bullying, hostile environment are attention-grabbing and powerful. When kids are scared they tend to shy away, like a turtle pulling into its shell, hoping no one notices them. This makes them appear like an easy target to those looking for one.
- Document and share everything. The school's hands are tied in many ways, but you and your daughter can help get the result you want by focusing on facts, safety, and sharing your documentation.
- Write an email to the principal stating how if this aggressive behavior continues next year, you will hold her out of school until they can provide a safe situation for your daughter. Be clear that you are holding the school accountable for her absence and they will need to make arrangements so it doesn't impact her academics negatively.
Parents really do have a lot more power to affect change in schools than they realize.
What's most important is for your daughter to feel heard, seen, felt, and protected. We are wired to experience bad things. This is not the issue. She can handle boys being mean, angry, and stupid. She can handle getting physically hurt and feeling scared. That's just part of being human who is alive on the planet. Our job is not to prevent bad things from happening to our kids.
Our job is to help her feel supported, understood, and powerful.
We want our children to be able to identify an injustice and believe they have the power to change it. In order to create system wide change, we need to have confidence, persistence, and understanding.
Life Coaching Answer:
I've been teaching various parenting topics for 18 years: friendship challenges, puberty, money, anxiety, raising a reader, toilet training, you name it, I taught a class on it.
But I will NEVER teach a class on bullying and here's why.
Right now, think the thought, "My daughter is being bullied." Notice how you feel when you think that thought. Defensive? Tense? Tight? Ready to leap into action? What kind of action do we want to take from this state? We want to fight. We clench our fists and brace ourselves. We want to punch that bully. Or his parents. Or the school. The THOUGHT "My child is being bullied" makes us want to bully right back!
It's a natural response. We are powerful momma lions wanting to protect our children, heck, ALL CHILDREN from these bullies. We think things like: "He needs to be taught a lesson." "He can't go around hurting people." "The schools can't allow kids to behave this way."
None of these thoughts are helpful.
We can teach this boy lessons in kindness but we can't make him learn. He does go around hurting people so clearly he CAN hurt people. The schools are obligated to educate all children, even ones with behavior issues. They can instruct and provide consequences, but there are protocols they have to follow before they can legally remove a child.
When we hear the word bullying, we jump into fight mode. This makes US feel powerful, but doesn't help our KID feel powerful. It also doesn't help us jump through the necessary hoops in order for productive action to be taken. The schools need us to write down the specifics, exactly what FACTS took place, but it's hard to do this when we have such a strong emotional response. Instead of helping schools take appropriate legal action, we get mad and stay mad.
If you really want to help your daughter, remove the word bullying from YOUR vocabulary, but encourage HER to use it. She feels empowered because she knows bullying is wrong and this isn't her fault. You can help her stay focused on taking productive action to make her school a better, safer place for everybody.
The best result to come from bullying is the victim learns her words have power, she feels supported, and believes that she has the ability to create social change.
Supermom Kryptonite - Complaining
In episode 16, I mention that getting together with girl friends and venting about frustrations can be very helpful. Venting your emotions into a journal or with a trusted friend, can release the pressure, helping you think more clearly and hear your own wisdom. Complaining is repeating the problem from a place of powerlessness. It implies that nothing is going to change and you are helpless. Every time we repeat the same negative story, we reinforce the synapse in our brain, making it stronger and feel truer. Be careful not repeat anything that you don't want to grow. Complaining not only makes us feel tired and helpless but negatively impacts the mood of those we are complaining with.
Supermom Power Boost - Let off steam
In order to access our calm, logical, and effective part of our brain, Momma Lion needs to let off some steam. We want to honor the anger, it's an important emotion to have. Anger signals injustice. Don't suppress it, instead:
- go to kick boxing class,
- scream your head off at your daughters swim meet
- rip up a magazine
- stomp on a cardboard box
Let your kid see mom process anger in a healthy way so they learn healthy ways to let it out.
Today's Quote of the Day
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed; it's the only thing that ever has." Margaret Mead
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