Better ways to deal with schoolyard tormentors
Andrew Edwards
Growing up in Kingston, Jamaica, Mark Brown, like many other
youngsters, had his run-ins with bullies. Addressing sixth-graders at
Dwyer Middle School, Brown related how he had troubles with three
bothersome girls when he was young.
“Thirty-three years, and I still remember it like it was
yesterday,” Brown said.
The lesson Brown, now a motivational speaker who travels the
country talking to school children, hoped to get across to the Junior
Oilers was that words can hurt, and that the pain caused by bullies
can last for years. Peppering his talk with jokes and anecdotes,
Brown encouraged the students to be respectful to others and look
beyond the “plastic smiles” that bullying victims can wear.
“You don’t know what can go on behind a plastic smile,” he said.
According to National Education Assn. statistics cited by Brown,
about 160,000 children stay home from school because they fear
bullies. One student at the assembly said she used to feign illness
to stay home from school and avoid being teased.
“I used to pretend that I had a stomach ache,” 12-year-old Kailey
Sanetti said.
Brown’s positive message for the children was encouraging to
Kailey.
“It made me feel better inside for being picked on in the fourth
grade,” she said.
Campus bullying can be compared to the Disney film, “Beauty and
the Beast,” Brown said. Bullies are like Gaston, the arrogant hunter,
and many children play the roles of angry villagers who follow Gaston
to persecute the Beast for being different.
“All of us are like Gaston,” Brown said, who told the
sixth-graders they should strive to emulate Belle, the “beauty” of
the story who discovers the prince inside the Beast.
“You’ve never tried to find the prince or princess inside that
person,” he said. “Talk to that weird kid, that strange kid.”
The idea resonated with 12-year-old Sabrina Auge.
“It made me feel like a princess for being picked on too much,”
she said.
Brown said he structured his message around the cartoon so he
could build a bridge between himself and the children instead of
simply showing up and telling them what to do.
“You can’t come out and say, ‘Thou shalt not,’ to 12-year-old
kids, it’s like, ‘Who’s this guy? What does he want?,’” Brown said.
For children troubled by bullies, Brown’s five points of advice
are to walk away from troublemakers, stay with friends instead of
going around alone, try to use humor to defuse conflicts, stand up
for oneself without resorting to fighting, and bring problems to
adults.
For parents, Brown recommends they keep in close touch with
principals and teachers so they know what happens at school.
“Parents need to take bullying seriously. Some people say that’s
part of growing up ... but some kids can’t handle that,” he said.
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