A Florida mother was arrested this month for allegedly stabbing her two sons' bullies in the back with box cutters. News reports stated that after calming down an altercation between her sons and a group of boys, the mother reignited the situation and attacked the boys, sending two to the hospital.
Last year, a teenage boy posted something nasty and hurtful in response to a teenage girl's Facebook posting. The girl was distraught, contemplated hurting herself and complained to her mother that she had been bullied. This caused the mother to become distraught. A short time later, police say, the mother saw the boy in a mall and took matters into her own hands, literally. She allegedly choked him.
But the reaction among many to the news reports was that the story was about a heroic mother seeking vengeance against a terrible bully on behalf of her victimized daughter, not an adult choking a child.
Although these two examples are extreme reactions to alleged bullying, many of us are overreacting to childhood aggression in less-extreme, everyday circumstances. It is not uncommon for adults to define even minor difficulties between children, such as being left out of social situations, as bullying. This is fundamentally changing the way we understand childhood.
We hear a lot about bullying - on the playgrounds, in schools, in the media. As a culture, we are infuriated with the bullies and terrified for the victims, and rightly so when it is appropriate. But the idea that childhood today is full of bullies is misleading. We do have a problem, but it's not with our children. It's with us, the adults.
Today we see children as being either dangerous villains or helpless victims, but the truth is kids haven't changed that much in the past generation. I have worked as an educator and a clinician in schools for 25 years, and I can attest that children are not meaner, nastier or more aggressive than they used to be. Nor are they more fragile.
Admittedly, digital media amplify some of their mistakes and pour salt into wounds, but the behavior and reactions aren't new. What's new is our reaction to childhood aggression - and our increasing impatience with children and readiness to label them when they make certain mistakes or experience pain.
What caused this shift? In a word, Columbine, but not for the reasons many believe.
Dave Cullen, in his book "Columbine," wrote that after the 1999 Colorado school massacre, the media crafted the explanation that shooters Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold had been bullied. They apparently hadn't been, but the nation - fearing a repeat of the tragedy - adopted a zero-tolerance attitude toward many normal, albeit painful, aspects of childhood behavior and development, and defined them as bullying.
As a result, behaviors such as social exclusion, persistent unfriendliness and a nasty remark on Facebook have become intolerable acts that cause grave victimization. We now react to the children who commit these acts with a degree of intolerance that we wouldn't consider in other areas of their lives, and we assume that when children feel pain as a result of such mistakes, they will be scarred for life.
Can you imagine if we called children stupid when they made mistakes in math? Or if we assumed they'd never recover when they fell off their bikes? This is how we're essentially reacting every time we label children bullies or victims for making typical childhood mistakes or when they feel any hurt in a relationship. And we're doing this with an unprecedented degree of abandon.
Stanford professor and author Carol Dweck explains that labels create something called a "fixed mind-set," which limits how children perceive themselves and how we perceive them.
This is not just a question of semantics. Our penchant for labeling children in situations such as these, and our increasingly fixed mind-set about their behavior, is a real threat to their welfare. As soon as children are labeled bullies, this seems to give us permission to unleash on them a degree of anger and scorn that is frightening. As for the ones we label victims, we keep them identified with their pain and deny them the opportunity to develop true resilience.
Instead of being so quick to label them, we must teach them how to deal with their aggression and pain appropriately and to develop compassion, impulse control and resilience in their relationships. And we must learn to do the same.
Susan Eva Porter, a social worker and school administrator, is the author of "Bully Nation: Why America's Approach to Childhood Aggression is Bad for Everyone."
Susan Eva Porter / We worry too much about bullying - pressofAtlanticCity.com: Commentary
1-877-773-7724
SubscriberServices@pressofac.com
Susan Eva Porter / We worry too much about bullying
Posted: Friday, March 22, 2013 12:01 am
Susan Eva Porter / We worry too much about bullying
A Florida mother was arrested this month for allegedly stabbing her two sons' bullies in the back with box cutters. News reports stated that after calming down an altercation between her sons and a group of boys, the mother reignited the situation and attacked the boys, sending two to the hospital.
Last year, a teenage boy posted something nasty and hurtful in response to a teenage girl's Facebook posting. The girl was distraught, contemplated hurting herself and complained to her mother that she had been bullied. This caused the mother to become distraught. A short time later, police say, the mother saw the boy in a mall and took matters into her own hands, literally. She allegedly choked him.
But the reaction among many to the news reports was that the story was about a heroic mother seeking vengeance against a terrible bully on behalf of her victimized daughter, not an adult choking a child.
Although these two examples are extreme reactions to alleged bullying, many of us are overreacting to childhood aggression in less-extreme, everyday circumstances. It is not uncommon for adults to define even minor difficulties between children, such as being left out of social situations, as bullying. This is fundamentally changing the way we understand childhood.
We hear a lot about bullying - on the playgrounds, in schools, in the media. As a culture, we are infuriated with the bullies and terrified for the victims, and rightly so when it is appropriate. But the idea that childhood today is full of bullies is misleading. We do have a problem, but it's not with our children. It's with us, the adults.
Today we see children as being either dangerous villains or helpless victims, but the truth is kids haven't changed that much in the past generation. I have worked as an educator and a clinician in schools for 25 years, and I can attest that children are not meaner, nastier or more aggressive than they used to be. Nor are they more fragile.
Admittedly, digital media amplify some of their mistakes and pour salt into wounds, but the behavior and reactions aren't new. What's new is our reaction to childhood aggression - and our increasing impatience with children and readiness to label them when they make certain mistakes or experience pain.
What caused this shift? In a word, Columbine, but not for the reasons many believe.
Dave Cullen, in his book "Columbine," wrote that after the 1999 Colorado school massacre, the media crafted the explanation that shooters Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold had been bullied. They apparently hadn't been, but the nation - fearing a repeat of the tragedy - adopted a zero-tolerance attitude toward many normal, albeit painful, aspects of childhood behavior and development, and defined them as bullying.
As a result, behaviors such as social exclusion, persistent unfriendliness and a nasty remark on Facebook have become intolerable acts that cause grave victimization. We now react to the children who commit these acts with a degree of intolerance that we wouldn't consider in other areas of their lives, and we assume that when children feel pain as a result of such mistakes, they will be scarred for life.
Can you imagine if we called children stupid when they made mistakes in math? Or if we assumed they'd never recover when they fell off their bikes? This is how we're essentially reacting every time we label children bullies or victims for making typical childhood mistakes or when they feel any hurt in a relationship. And we're doing this with an unprecedented degree of abandon.
Stanford professor and author Carol Dweck explains that labels create something called a "fixed mind-set," which limits how children perceive themselves and how we perceive them.
This is not just a question of semantics. Our penchant for labeling children in situations such as these, and our increasingly fixed mind-set about their behavior, is a real threat to their welfare. As soon as children are labeled bullies, this seems to give us permission to unleash on them a degree of anger and scorn that is frightening. As for the ones we label victims, we keep them identified with their pain and deny them the opportunity to develop true resilience.
Instead of being so quick to label them, we must teach them how to deal with their aggression and pain appropriately and to develop compassion, impulse control and resilience in their relationships. And we must learn to do the same.
Susan Eva Porter, a social worker and school administrator, is the author of "Bully Nation: Why America's Approach to Childhood Aggression is Bad for Everyone."
Posted in Commentary on Friday, March 22, 2013 12:01 am.
Similar Stories
Most Read
Opinion Home
Editorial Cartoons
Commentary
Editorials
Letters
Recent Polls
Your Lawmakers
Connect with us
Doug and Susan Walker live on one of the shortest streets in Somers Point. In fact, their house is one of only three homes on Warwick Avenue, a one-block street off Ocean Avenue that dead ends at the wetlands. But they also have one of the long... More »
SEARCH PROPERTIES
Place A Classified Ad »
By Tim Spell, Motor Matters More »
SEARCH CARS+
Place A Classified Ad »
Most of the nation’s casino markets have finally recovered from the recession, propelling revenue from slot machines and table games to near-record levels in 2012, according to a new report on the economic health of the gambling industry. More »
SEARCH JOBS+
Place A Classified Ad »
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN PRINT
AND ONLINE TODAY »
Browse Classified Categories
Place A Classified Ad »
Featured Businesses
Add your business here »Frankie's Pizza II
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-625-7566
Mangos Restaurant Llc
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-487-7450
M & S Produce Outlet
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-383-8323
Citywide Towing
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
609-517-3871
Copiers Plus
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-7587
Bob's Garden Center
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-6306
Skelly's Hi Point Pub
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-641-3172
C-Jam Yacht Sales
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1175
Richard T Fauntleroy Pc
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-646-4466
Sack O' Subs
Ocean City, NJ 08226 [Map]
609-525-0460
Linwood Care Center
Linwood, NJ 08221 [Map]
609-927-6131
Buck Tails Outfitters
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-829-2229
Tackle Direct
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-788-3819
Eddie's Auto Body Shop
Erma, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-4613
Pappy's Fishin' Stuff
Ocean City, NJ 08226 [Map]
609-398-6996
Mouse Trap Bowling A...
Woodbine, NJ 08270 [Map]
609-861-2695
Mays Landing Golf &...
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-641-4411
Vip Skindeep Llc
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-677-9900
Sunnyland Child Care...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-823-4110
Cape May County Hear...
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 [Map]
609-465-9199
Ladies Invitational ...
Absecon, 08201 [Map]
Mama Mia Of Eht
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-484-8877
Up The Creek Tavern ...
Keyport, NJ 07735 [Map]
732-739-0214
Matt Blatt Kia
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-573-3100
Boardwalk Honda
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-428-4475
...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-788-8789
Royal Suites Healthc...
Galloway, NJ 08205 [Map]
609-748-9900
Handcrafted Cabinetr...
West Creek, NJ 08092 [Map]
609-891-0166
Absecon Bay Sportsme...
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-484-0409
Dolfin Dock Inc
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1730
Rio Nails And Spa
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-463-8868
Up The Creek Marina
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-272-9252
Raff's Recycling
Cape May Court House , NJ 08210 [Map]
609-465-7406
Historic Cold Spring...
Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-898-4504
Frank’s Jewelers
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-4252
Oreck Floor Care Center
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-272-7590
Surrey Beach House ...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-822-6550
Bloomingsales
Brigantine, NJ 08203 [Map]
609-266-6667
Fioretta Llc
Northfield, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-241-8628
KAS Website Design C...
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-703-4696
Tuckahoe Bike Shop
Woodbine, NJ 08230 [Map]
609-628-0101
Perfect Solutions So...
Northfield, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-601-5252
Cape Regional Medica...
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 [Map]
609-463-2000
Simple Escape Spa
Galloway, NJ 08205 [Map]
609-464-2313
Designer Consignment
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-5444
Thompson Marine & En...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-927-2415
Keeper Back Bay Fishing
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-576-5998
Bennett Chevy
Egg Harbor Twp., NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-0444
Crabby's Restaurant
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-625-2722
One Stop Bait & Tackle
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
609-348-9450
Grace Energy
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-465-5545
On a Mission
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-646-4483
Duke O'fluke
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-926-2280
Beachcomber Coins & ...
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-1031
Pier 47
Wildwood, NJ 08260 [Map]
609-729-4774
Rio Auto
Palermo, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-390-0001
English Creek Supply
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-6168
Captain Andy's Marina
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-822-0916
Access Roofing & Con...
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
888-661-0333
Schooner Island Marina
Wildwood, NJ 08260 [Map]
609-729-8900
Newkirk Family Veter...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-2120
Jack Facciolo, D.O.
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-886-0800
Maynard's Cafe
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-822-8423
Ventnor Heights Auto...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-823-0520
Wild Styles/Boost Mo...
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-846-7030
Coastal Designer Outlet
Ocean View, NJ 08230 [Map]
609-624-1544
JBS Solar and Wind LLC
North Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-7373
Avalon Limousine Ser...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-0008
Atlantic Limousine, Inc
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
800-348-3484
Montreal Inn
Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-7011
Black Horse Auto Sales
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-272-1877
Permanent Makeup by Amy
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-383-2769
Carl “Luke” Roth of ...
Villas, NJ 08251 [Map]
609-886-8200
Sport Hyundai Dodge
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-1200
Gutter Giants LLC
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
Professional Physcal...
N. Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-9800
Shore Orthopaedic Un...
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1991
Fish Finder the
Brigantine, NJ 08203 [Map]
609-264-0918
Foglio's Abbey Floor...
Marmora , NJ 08223 [Map]
609-390-3876
The Boat Shop
Manahawkin, NJ 08050 [Map]
609-597-1271
Foschi Studio
Linwood, NJ 08221 [Map]
609-927-3044
Find Local Businesses
Popular Categories
Sections
Services
Contact Us
Contacts By DepartmentThe Press of Atlantic City Media Group
PO Box 3100
1000 West Washington Ave.
Pleasantville, NJ 08232-3100
1-877-773-7724
609-272-7000 SubscriberServices@pressofac.com
Search
© Copyright 2013, pressofAtlanticCity.com, Pleasantville, NJ. Powered by BLOX Content Management System from TownNews.com. [Terms of Use | Privacy Policy]